by KJo » Thu May 01, 2008 2:18 pm
4 star review in the NY Daily News:
4 STARS
IRON MAN
BY: JOE NEUMAIER
A millionaire weapons expert builds a superhero armor to fight evil. With Robert Downey, Gwyneth Paltrow, Terrence Howard, Jeff Bridges. Directed by Jon Favreau. (2:05). PG-13: Violence, explosions. At area theaters.
There’s really not a lot of Iron Man in “Iron Man,” opening Friday. That’s ok — the summer’s first action blockbuster is essentially “The Robert Downey Jr. Show,” which is always a blast.
When a rock’ em-sock’ em first hour is added as well as, yes, some Iron Man fight sequences, the result is the first comic-book movie in a while that actually feels like a classic comic-book: Fast, furious, and flip. Forget about superheroes with love problems and tortured souls.
Downey is Tony Stark, a millionaire arms inventor who, while giving a weapons demonstration to troops in Afghanistan, is attacked and kidnapped. Shoved in a cave by terrorists who give him a week to build a rocket from spare parts, Stark — who now has magnetized sphere in his chest that keeps shrapnel in his body from entering his aorta — instead constructs a tank-suit that looks like the Michelin Man and boasts more goodies than a Swiss army knife.
Back home at his L.A. mountaintop bachelor pad (which of course has a workshop General Motors would kill for), Stark literally experiences a change of heart, deciding to stop making war machines. So he builds a suit of armor that flies like a jet, shoots energy blasts and helps keep his ticker going as he fights injustice.
The fact that Iron Man is a B-lister in the Marvel Comics stable doesn’t stop director Jon Favreau and his writers from aiming high and generally hitting the target. Meanwhile, Stark’s inner circle, including Gwyneth Paltrow (sexy and bookish as Pepper Pots - his redheaded Girl Friday), Terrence Howard (tough and loyal) as his military connection, and Jeff Bridges (bald and menacing), as a mentor-turned-villain, lend a touch of class.
But cruising above it all is Downey. Since Iron Man’s helmet has no nose and a little rectangular mouth, the smartest thing Favreau did was cast a lead who’s constantly alive. The few times the red-and-yellow battle gear is front-and-center in “Transformers”-ish action moments, Favreau often shows his star’s face inside the shell-head. As Downey-as-Stark pumps life into every scene, it’s clear the actor regarded as one of the best of his generation has not let the rusted set in after his battle with drugs a decade ago.
Even in the midst of those personal troubles, Downey always heated up every movie he was in. Now that he’s been entrusted with a superhero franchise, you may just believe the man can actually fly.