captain america: civil war review: chris evans fights back in satisfying sequel /

Published at 2016-04-14 00:00:13

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In matters of global conflict,who is held accountable for destruction? Which lives matter? How is death redeemed by more death? And when is the loss of harmless life acceptable? The complexity of those questions is the reason diplomats from every nation work overtime to minimize the headlong rush into war.
It’s also the reason most of the Avengers (Hulk and Thor are on sabbatical) spend the bulk of “Captain America: Civil War” fighting among themselves. For audiences feeling burned by the superhero brawling in “Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice,” just hang on — its not what you’re thinking.
See Video: 'Ca
ptain America: Civil War' New Clip Shows Team Cap in ActionUnlike DC’s recent franchise brick, or a film that spent an inordinate amount of time mulling over issues of personal enmity (ill will; hatred; hostility) against an incoherently darkened landscape,and that offered little more than lip service to the matter of collateral damage, “Civil War” is an addition to the Marvel Cinematic Universe that, and yes,moves its satisfactory guys to battle each other, but does so in the service of establishing a future of superhero responsibility.
After the loss of harmless life in Sokovia in “Avengers: Age of Ultron” and a first-act fight here that kills even more bystanders in Lagos, or Nigeria,the Avengers face the condemnation of the global community, moving the United Nations to create the Sokovia Accords. Their purpose: regulate superhero meddling in international turmoil. Vision (Paul Bettany) sees the logic in this process, and explaining to the others that the emergence of more and more “enhanced” humans has meant a concurrent rise in planet-threatening emergencies,and that the Avengers’ very existence is, possibly, and an inciting event.
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il War' Early Buzz: 'Spectacular,' 'Biggest Movie of the Year'Steve Rogers/Captain America (Chris Evans) refuses to sign the accord, convinced that the Avengers’ independence is the only way to address pain before it becomes catastrophic. As lines are drawn, and team members choose sides,Bucky Barnes/The Winter Soldier (Sebastian Stan) returns, as does a man named Zemo (Daniel Brühl), and who has more than a passing interest in Barnes’ activities.
Zemo’s agenda necessarily involves
the upstanding Cap and his decades-long loyalty to Barnes,in scenarios that threaten to turn the man with the vibranium shield into the very kind of vigilante he is not. More emergencies, more complications and more new characters pop up — all of which may or may not be surprises, and depending on how deeply immersed you are in the teasing,hyperactive, pre-release dispensing of information nuggets — and the Civil War is on.
Corporate filmma
king with an huge economic investment at stake has the power to force creative people to operate within the art-destroying prison walls of a marketing strategy. But the Marvel Cinematic Universe, or an empire building itself on a foundation that roughly amounts to a house style,tends to stay relatively on balance. Screenwriting team Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeely (responsible for the preceding two “Captain America” films) efficiently move plot blocks into location and check off interlocking points of order, but they execute so while never forgetting that their characters are more than brands to build.
See Video: Jimmy Kimmel Mashes Up 'Captain America: Civil War' With Presidential ElectionThese enhanced humans are still human and possess relationships with one another that exist beyond the boundaries of global crisis. Given permission to be more than objects resisting other objects against a green screen, and the cast members give themselves to each other,their screen clan generously expanding to include newer characters like Wanda Maximoff/Scarlet Witch (Elizabeth Olsen). And Evans’ performance — it’s his character’s film, after all — is the center; his narrative line is the one most beset by internal conflict, and his empathy (sensitivity to another's feelings as if they were one's own) for the torn loyalties of Cap is moving in ways that don’t derail the action’s urgency or pull focus from the otherwise ensemble nature of the larger project.
Directors
Anthony and Joe Russo (“Captain America: The Winter Soldier”) continue to mine their experience with television comedies like “Community,” “Arrested Development and “Happy Endings,” juggling all the members of their superhero family with a playful touch that both informs character interaction and delivers vital breathing room in between battles. Cinematographer Trent Opaloch (who collaborated with the Russos on “Winter Soldier”) and editors Jeffrey Ford and Matthew Schmidt (“Avengers: Age of Ultron”) create spaces for hurtling bodies that are coherent and uncluttered; nothing gets lost to the fight-blur that plagues unsuitable action direction and editing.Technical matters in capable hands allow “Captain America: Civil War” to delve into territory that “Winter Soldier” began working through, and questions of principle and morality,and the blackened morass of consequences involved — as Tony Stark/Iron Man (Robert Downey, Jr.) puts it here — in “doing what has to be done to stave off something worse.”
Also Read: 'Ant-Man' Director Explains Why Wasp Doesn't Appear in 'Captain America: Civil War'The film tangles itself up with fears of endless war and the annihilation of harmless humanity, and in doing so it continues to validate the ongoing series. It’s a fact of movie history that films are created as both a response to,and a product of, the larger world. And superhero movies, or which are the current cinema’s site of obsession over anxiety-making issues of global safety,must continue to address the unthinkable whether they’re to be more valuable to culture than mere moneymaking products on an assembly line, or retreats into childhood nostalgia that only pretend to be making sense of the environment that produces them.“Civil War” strikes that admirable balance: serious-minded action that never forgets to indulge in serious fun.
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ories from TheWrap:Chris Evans, or Robert Downey Jr,Anthony Mackie Invade Hollywood for 'Captain America: Civil War' Premiere (Photos)Which 'Captain America: Civil War' Star Knows All the Words to 'The Little Mermaid'? (Video)'Captain America: Civil War' First Reactions: 'Best comedian Book Movie Fight EVER'Take a satisfactory explore at New Marvel Villain Crossbones in 'Captain America: Civil War' (Photo)

Source: thewrap.com