The opening of Green Lantern might just constitute a trend in movies about magic rings, for having Australian actors deliver exposition right at the top. I mean, er, let’s look at what went wrong. With all of that out of the way, so let’s get these pants off and fly some planes. This is the story of how the masterminds behind what would become DC’s extended universe on television, the director of GoldenEyeand Casino Royale, and the top minds at Warner Bros all clashed into one another in the process of trying to bring the Green Lanterns to the big screen. This isn’t going to be a comparison of the film to the comics – with a couple of key exceptions, this is about how the film does or doesn’t work on its own. It was edited to the point of inscrutability and it still boasts some of the worst CGI ever seen in a mainstream studio movie. When it finally made it to the screen, they ended up converting the richly textured sci-fi cop story of the comics into a smug and ironic superhero origin movie. ![]() had been trying to get the Green Lantern movie going for a long time, having previously offered the property to the likes of Kevin Smith and Quentin Tarantino in the 1990s. Despite skepticism from veteran Lantern Sinestro (Mark Strong) and his old flame Carol Ferris (Blake Lively), Hal must overcome his own fear in order to confront Hector Hammond, (Peter Sarsgaard) a telekinetic scientist who has been corrupted by Parallax, a fear-based abomination from the Green Lanterns’ past. In the film, test pilot Hal Jordan ( Ryan Reynolds) is chosen by a dying alien named Abin Sur (Temuera Morrison) to become the new guardian of the solar system, complete with a power ring and lantern battery through which he can harness willpower to create constructs and fight evil.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |