Not the film the world needs. |
The Spirit is a film with few virtues. There's a fingerful but that's it.
Gabriel Macht delivers a certain charisma in the titular role as Will Eisner's classic middle-class superhero. This is his first time carrying a movie and had the focus been shifted more on him, his antics and his conflicts it would have been a better film. We witness some lovely moments when The Spirit talks about the love he has for his city, echoing something at the very heart of the superhero mythos. One scene has him even using the city as a shield, a weapon and a guide in his role as its guardian. These are poignant moments that evoke that somewhere underneath all the terribleness there might have been a spark of a good film here.
That's where all the virtues end.
People will probably gravitate to the cinematography of Bill Pope which does its best to marry Frank Miller's Sin City with the pulp comics of The Spirit's origins. But as pretty as the cinematography does look here and there, most of it is too busy, too dark and too careless. As a film that tries to show the protagonist's relationship with his city the cinematography should have created a sense of being in a vast metropolis. Instead the visuals feel completely green-screened and the effect is that the film ends up looking like it was shot on a stage instead of in a wide open city. There is also something that feels unfinished about the green-screening process as though some more work needed to be done and as such the film has the look of the cut scenes out of late 90's full motion video games with the characters standing out from rendered CGI effects like sore thumbs.
Black & Red instead of Blue & Red. |
The bad guys. |
The film is a mess of tones and genres. Scenes tend to go on forever without anywhere to go in the first place. There's an overuse of flashbacks. And most of the dialog is delivered in soliloquy (including a scene where The Spirit talks to a cat for 5 minutes). There are no subtleties in delivery, pacing or acting. Everything is blunt, harsh and cold. The audience knows everything in the first 15 minutes and it takes the rest of the characters an hour to catch up. It's frustrating, busy and excruciating to watch. Even attempts at humor fall flat. A running joke with 24's Louis Lombardi is amateur in its rendition.
The Spirit cooperates with the police. |
The Octopus. |
Further to the acting, there is a bevy of female characters that clutter this film in an attempt to create some element of pulp sex drama. Johansson's Silken Floss is just money thrown down the drain as she brings nothing to the movie. I've never understood her appeal and this film is perhaps best proof of her need to hire an acting coach. The Morgenstern character is a time-waster and eats up screen time lecturing the audience on the Electra principle (Miller you created a character named Elektra, you have a fascination with it, we get it, but it has no place in this film). To believe her character we'd have to believe that a rookie cop would be the only one to notice a gigantic clue two days after a crime scene has been cleared. Sarah Paulson and Eva Mendes, both in terribly written roles, try the hardest and as an audience member I appreciated that.
Scarlett Johansson is making a career out of nerd films. |
Not even nude Eva Mendez can save this film from oblivion. |
Lionsgate this is a train wreck. If this is your idea of giving your audience a holiday present honestly shame on you.
Overall, a completely forgettable experience only for daredevil connoisseurs or The Spirit fans. Nevertheless, we do give Mr. Miller credit for trying to deliver a darker update on a character that remains relevant as one of the most important pulp comic book characters of all times. Perhaps if Miller decided to go on a more Dick Tracy like direction, he would have succeeded, who knows.
Here's the movie trailer:
3 comments:
Aunque es entretenida no esta en mi colección. Miller y Rodrigues se basan en demasía en la estética de Sin City, haciendo una odiosa comparación.
Saludos.
Robert Rodríguez no tuvo nada que ver con este film amigo, fue solamente Frank Miller el que estuvo en la silla directiva. El intento de hacer a The Spirit más oscuro le costó carísimo.
De donde saque que estuvo Rodriguez, lo debo haber confundido con la mencionada Sin City.
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