Mel's
Cine-Files
By
Melissa Agar
Captain
America: The Winter Soldier (Marvel
Entertainment/Walt Disney, 2014) – Directors: Anthony Russo, Joe
Russo & Joss Whedon (post-credits scene). Writers: Christopher
Markus, Stephen McFeely (s/p), Ed Brubaker (concept and story), &
Joe Simon, Jack Kirby (comic book). Cast: Chris Evans, Samuel L.
Jackson, Scarlett Johansson, Robert Redford, Sebastian Stan, Anthony
Mackie, Cobie Smulders, Frank Grillo, Maximiliano Hernandez, Emily
Van Camp, Hayley Atwell, & Toby Jones. Color, 136 minutes.
It
is hard to go anywhere these days without encountering people
complaining about the state of our world and reminiscing about the
“good old days.” I’ll admit to moments of being guilty of this
myself, but working with high school kids does give me a chance to
see that the more things change, the more they stay the same. Sure,
my students are outfitted with technology I could only have dreamed
of when I was in high school, but the core of their identities
haven’t changed all that much. Our kids are still driven by the
same things that drove us – a desire to be free, an unflinching
loyalty to friends, and a fundamental belief in justice and fairness
above all. Those values may get lost in all the twittering and
instagramming, but they are, indeed, still there. This truth also
runs through the core of Captain America: The Winter Soldier,
the latest installment in Marvel Studios’s epic series.
It
is a truth that our hero, Steve Rogers (Evans), is struggling to
discover. After decades in deep freeze, Captain America is still
coming to terms with the world he’s awoken to. He embraces the
technology that allows him to play catch-up to all he missed during
his nap, but it’s the obscured motives and shady politics that
leave him questioning what role he can play in the contemporary
world. It’s hard, in a world filled with terrorists and
counterterrorism agencies, to tell who the good guy is and who the
bad guy is, and that is taking Cap a lot longer to adjust to than
iPods and the Internet.
When Nick Fury (Jackson), a guy who has
always kind of walked that line between trustworthy and shady, is
attacked by shadowy forces that may or may not be connected to
SHIELD, Steve finds himself on the wrong side of power and on the run
with only Natasha Romanoff/Black Widow (Johansson) to keep him
company. Steve and Natasha turn to Steve’s new friend Sam Wilson
(Mackie), a war veteran who has his own heroic secrets. Their quest
to uncover why Fury was targeted leads them to uncovering shadowy
figures lurking within SHIELD and governments all over the world and
puts them in the line of fire of a mythical assassin known as the
Winter Soldier. All of this leads to the looming launch of a project
known as Project Insight, a counterterrorism strike so awesome that
it could eradicate the globe of all known terrorists and potential
terrorists within seconds of launch.
There
is a dual core of cynicism and hope running through the core of The
Winter Soldier. On the one hand, people who lie and kill to
get what they want surround Cap. Nick Fury tells Cap to trust no one,
and it’s a lesson our hero learns time and again as he finds
himself face to face with betrayal and danger. Even the motivation
behind all of this subterfuge is a masquerade of sorts. The powers
that be, in launching Project Insight, claim that they are striking
terrorists before the terrorists can strike us, but when targets
listed include Bruce Banner and Stark Industries, it seems as if
there is more going on than just some preemptive strikes against
national security threats. The film becomes, then, a political
thriller and commentary on our own counterterrorist policies. Surely,
I’m not the only one who thought of drone strikes as Fury lays out
the awesome potential of SHIELD’s latest weaponry.
On
the other hand, there a sense of hope and belief that people are
still good deep down and will stand up for those core American values
when the chips are down. Cap finds solace with friends like Natasha,
Sam, and Agent Maria Hill (Smulders) who are willing to lay down
their lives to protect innocent (and maybe even not entirely
innocent) lives. When Cap issues a challenge to SHIELD employees to
do the right thing, a war erupts as agents turn on each other as
Project Insight’s coming to fruition looms.
Thematically,
there is a lot going on in The Winter Soldier. There
is a lot going on visually, too, although the film is less reliant on
CGI effects than other Marvel films. (Looking at you, Thor!)
At times, the action does become a bit chaotic and overwhelming, a
truth of many contemporary action films who seem to feel like it’s
just not good enough unless the entire frame is literally PACKED with
imagery. When you factor in the 3D (and I did opt to see the film in
3D after having enjoyed its use in the first Captain
America film), the hyperkinetic energy of the action
sequences can be a bit overwhelming. The 3D here was also not as
effectively utilized as it was in other Marvel films. Outside of some
additional depth, there just weren’t those moments that took my
breath away like there have been before. Maybe I wasted $3 for the 3D
showing or maybe this is the future of 3D films – added depth and
fewer “in your face” moments.
The
Winter Soldier is not a perfect film, but its willingness to
allow for deeper meaning behind the action puts it a cut above many
other comic book films. While I tend to prefer the swagger of Iron
Man, the earnestness of Captain America has its
appeal and makes for a far more enjoyable afternoon at the theaters
than some of the more brooding entries like Thor, The
Dark Knight, or Man of Steel. Captain America has
awoken to a world far more complicated than the one he left, but it
is a world where the inherent values he was so willing to fight to
protect still exist even if they are hidden behind greater layers of
corruption and greed. In the end, Cap will save the day (we assume)
and those values will rise to remind us that freedom, friendship, and
justice will always win out in the end.
Grade:
B+
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