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Daredevil
Movie Stats & Links |
| Starring: |
Ben Affleck, Jennifer Garner,
Colin Farrell, Michael Clarke Duncan, Joe Pantoliano |
| MPAA Rated: |
PG-13 |
| Released By: |
20th
Century Fox |
| Web Site: |
www.daredevilmovie.com |
| Kiddie Movie: |
Not too young. |
| Date Movie: |
Only if she has the hots for Ben. |
| Gratuitous Sex: |
There is a scene, but we still
don't get to see Jennifer Garner's boobies. |
| Gratuitous
Violence: |
People die in bad ways. |
| Action: |
People get chased in bad ways. |
| Laughs: |
Mostly lines from Bullseye. |
| Memorable
Scene: |
Nothing stands out. |
| Memorable
Quote: |
Bullseye: "I never miss." |
| Directed By: |
Mark Steven Johnson |
| Produced By: |
Arnon Milchan, Gary Foster, Avi
Arad |
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Daredevil
A Movie Review |
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Growing up I was a fan of comic book heroes, but only
if they were TV stars. I wasn’t a reader, I was a watcher, and
although he might have had a cartoon on TV, I don’t remember
Daredevil. Pretty much if you weren’t a part of the Justice League of
America, I don’t remember you. And so it is for me with the Daredevil
character. I really didn’t know anything about him other than
listening to Howard Stern talk about him, so going into the movie all
I really knew was that Daredevil was a blind dude whose other senses
became enhanced to make him capable of being a superhero. The baseline
for the story sounded fine, kinda like a Batman only blind, but when
it was announced that Ben Affleck was picked to play Daredevil I began
to get skeptical. I saw Ben Affleck as able to play the blind lawyer
part well, but there is just something about him that didn’t seem to
fit the part of the dark-sided superhero, and for me, I was pretty
much right, that and the fact that the movie as a whole was pretty
much crap.Here’s the basic run-down of the movie. We get introduced
to Daredevil, collapsing in a church, seemingly injured to the point
of no return, or at least a long recovery back. It’s now flashback
time and we get introduced into the psychological making of Daredevil,
and as usual it has to do with a childhood tragedy – in this case
young Matt Murdock finds his father murdered after just winning his
boxing match, a victim of the bad guys who wanted Dad Murdock to take
a dive. And so young Matt vows to fight crime and has a problem loving
women.
Let’s come to the present day, and as Matt goes about representing
the less fortunate victims in court by day, by night he plays justice
seeker for those who, well, pretty much can hire lawyers better than
he is. Meanwhile he is finding a deep underworld, controlled by
Kingpin (Michael Clarke Duncan), and sets it upon himself to take out
the bad guys. As the story goes he finds a girl, in this case Elektra
(Jennifer Garner), who kicks as much ass as he can, and Matt is now in
love. As his luck would have it, Elektra’s dad gets set up, a hit put
on him by Kingpin, a hit to be carried out by Bullseye (Colin Faffell),
and when Daredevil tries to save the day, Bullseye carries out the
dirty deed in such a way that Elektra thinks Daredevil killed her dad.
Alright, enough of the crap about the story, it’s pretty much
cookie-cutter, you can figure out most everything that is going to
happen, and mostly every episode of the story gets dragged out so you
just wait for the next scene to come. It is this, and the fact that I
didn’t really buy Affleck in the superhero mode, that made me
anxiously await the ending I figured was going to take place.
And, oh yea, for most of the movie Daredevil had this entire ritual to
heal himself, in a human sort of way, but at the end, without any
explanation, he miraculously overcomes a through-the-shoulder,
life-threatening puncture wound as if it never occurred.
There was a reason the first two installments of "Batman" worked,
and that was pretty much Michael Keaton. Christopher Reeve was a great
Superman, and lately it was Toby McGuire playing a near-perfect
Spider-Man. Why did these movies work? Because the lead character was
someone who fit both roles. You could believe Keaton as an eccentric
millionaire and a slightly devilish Batman; Reeve was great as the
clumsy Clark Kent, but not so over-the-top Superman; and McGuire had
the perfect boy-ish charm for Spider-Man. Sadly Affleck failed on the
superhero side, the side that is probably more important if we want to
believe the everyday person can be a superhero. As far as the rest of
the crew, Michael Clarke Duncan could have been a better bad guy if
they only would have let him; Garner is hot, kicks some major ass, but
gets trapped in a predictable role looking to avenge her father’s
death; and the only saving graces are Joe Pantoliano as the
inquisitive reporter, Ben Urich, looking to figure our the Daredevil
story, and saving every scene he was in, Farrell was great as Bullseye,
making him a totally over-the-top bad guy, much the way a comic book
bad guy should be.
I’m not sure who would have been a better fit for Daredevil, and
even if there were someone, I don’t know if they could have saved the
movie anyway. Like Batman, Daredevil seems to be more of a dark
character and that’s fine, but Daredevil seems to be too confused with
whether what he is doing is right or wrong (hence the scenes of him
seeking advice from a priest) rather than just realizing that there
are bad guys in this world and he has been given a gift to save the
people from those bad guys.
In the world of superhero movies I thought Daredevil failed. It
wasn’t that you look for something new because you know the underlying
story, that the superhero can’t really love someone, that they will
get the bad guy, and that there will always be an opening for a
sequel, but you just want it to be action-filled, you want a great
villain (Bullseye was great in this one but Duncan wasn't given the
chance), and you want to leave rooting for the good guys. In Daredevil
I was almost sad when Bullseye fell out of the window, he was the only
thing fun about the movie adventure. Sadly it’s 1 ½ stars out of 5 for
"Daredevil." Wait for the rental, wait for cable, or maybe a matinee.
It didn’t come across as a movie that you really needed to see on the
big screen.
That’s it for this one! I’m The Dude on the Right!! L8R!!! |