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GOO Reviews

~ An Edmonton-based movie blog

GOO Reviews

Tag Archives: superhero

Simul-Review: The Wolverine

03 Saturday Aug 2013

Posted by Thom Yee in Films, Simul-Review

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Tags

Action, comics, Marvel, superhero, X-Men

by Thom Yee and Grace Crawford

The Wolverine images courtesy of 20th Century Fox

The Wolverine images courtesy of 20th Century Fox

Thom:  If you asked me who my favourite member of the X-Men is, I would say Cyclops, a character I understand because he grew up shy and unsure of himself and became a hero through discipline and belief in a worthy cause.  He’s also got a great design; if you see him in a comic book, that distinctive visor — something he needs to wear at all times to not kill anyone just by looking at them — tells you right away what his power is.   If you asked me who my second favourite X-Man is, I would say Colossus, because he’s another example of great character design.  If you asked me my third, I would say Sunspot — who’s more of an extended member as he was never a full-on X-Man — for the same reason (and I love Kirby Krackle).

Continue reading →

X-Men: First Class

27 Saturday Jul 2013

Posted by Thom Yee in Films

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Action, comics, Marvel, superhero, X-Men

by Thom Yee

X-Men - First Class poster

X-Men: First Class images courtesy of 20th Century Fox

Remember childhood? Baseball? Dinosaurs? Weird Al? Those things you were supposed to like seemingly just because you were a kid, but you really never liked them at all? For me, a comic-book-nerd kid, X-Men was that thing (though I didn’t like those other things either). To me, the appeal of the X-Men never reached beyond the obvious attraction of a bunch of cool-looking characters with different powers. While that was cool, I always liked the Avengers and Justice League-related characters a lot more, and I think that’s down to the fact that I could buy in to the basic idea of standing up for truth and justice more than I could X-Men’s persecutional allegory. I can see it’s there, it’s a conceptual characteristic very obviously worn proudly and prominently by the series, and it’s apparently a big part of why the franchise has reached so many people, but I just never felt it. I just never understood the central conceit that people in the Marvel universe would draw a line between mutants born with powers and people who got them from serums or accidents or suits of armour. They both have powers; they’re both saving lives and fighting bad guys; why would it matter how they got their powers?

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Simul-Review: Man of Steel

22 Saturday Jun 2013

Posted by Thom Yee in Films, Simul-Review

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Action, comics, DC, DCEU, superhero, Superman

by Thom Yee and Grace Crawford

Man of Steel poster 1

All Man of Steel images courtesy of Warner Bros Pictures

Thom: The superhero concept has been around since 1938 and the debut of Superman in Action Comics #1. Superheroes have been with us long enough that, for a lot of people, they form a modern mythology more appealing than established faiths, a rich tapestry of stories instrumental in forming a set of core beliefs. Certainly for me, superheroes have been incredibly important and meaningful, and their stories have helped to inform who I am and most of everything I do. Of course, I would never claim that I regularly act heroically in any significant parts of my daily life, but every time I help someone out when I don’t need to, every small kindness, every moment of compassion comes from my view that good is its own reward and that we owe it to everyone to do right by them. And for me, most of those sensibilities came from reading comicbooks. If I was going to offer a theory on why superheroes endure in society and why, for many, they maintain fan followings into adulthood more so than many of the other elements of our childhoods, I would like to think it’s because they teach us about truth and justice in an unbreakable, intractable way; they help us to become the great people we can be and wish to be by giving us the light to show us the way. And in a world where religions destroy civilizations, where the Bible Belt won’t let go of its guns, and where priests are more associated with molestation than divinity, they do it in a way that we can actually be proud of.

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Simul-Review: Iron Man 3

10 Friday May 2013

Posted by Thom Yee in Films, Simul-Review

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Tags

Action, Comics Marvel, MCU, superhero

by Thom Yee and Grace Crawford

Iron Man 3 - Poster

Iron Man 3 images courtesy of Walt Disney Studios

Thom:  When it came time to review Iron Man 3, I thought I’d start out with a bunch of antithetical statements:

  • Iron Man 2 was just as good as the first one.
  • The Incredible Hulk was really good.
  • The Avengers could’ve been better.
  • Thor is the best Marvel Studios movie so far.

Now of course, those are just my opinions (and no, I’m not just a contrarian [or at least I’m trying not to be]), but that’s the way I’ve felt about the Marvel Studios movies so far.  I still remember the summer of 2008 when they first started and being the only one who was more impressed with The Incredible Hulk than Iron Man (remember, Iron Man came out in May of that year, followed by The Incredible Hulk just over a month later).

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The Avengers

24 Saturday Nov 2012

Posted by Thom Yee in Films

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Action, comics, Marvel, MCU, superhero

By Thom Yee

Marvel’s The Avengers images courtesy of Walt Disney Studios

“You were made to be ruled.”

So began the trailer for Marvel’s The Avengers.  And it seems that truer words were never spoken.  Ruled by revenue expectations, ruled by fan expectations, ruled by audience needs for a comfortable movie rather than a challenging one.  As Tom Hiddleston’s Loki puts it, “Freedom is life’s great lie.  Once you accept that… in your heart… you will know peace.”  The Avengers is technically a good movie.  It’s pretty clear by now that, with well over $1.5 billion in worldwide ticket sales, Disney’s Marvel’s The Avengers was, at the very least, a real crowd pleaser.

And that’s what I hate about it. Continue reading →

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