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Saturday, July 23, 2011

Captain America: The First Avenger (2011)

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Release Date: 07/22/2011 
Rating: PG-13 
Runtime: Not Yet Available 
Genre: Action 
Director: Joe Johnston

Synopsis

Meek U.S. Army soldier Steve Rogers (Chris Evans) takes part in an experimental military program that infuses him with super-human powers, and uses his newfound strength to battle the villainous Red Skull (Hugo Weaving) in this comic-book adventure from director Joe Johnston (The Wolfman, The Rocketeer). Tommy Lee Jones, Neal McDonough, and Stanley Tucci co-star in a film written by Christopher Markus and Stephen McFeeley (who previously collaborated on The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe). 

Superhero origin stories have been all the rage at the multiplex this summer, with Marvel Comics alone accounting for two such films, Thor and X-Men: First Class, both of which happily surpassed critics’ expectations. Its latest, Captain America: The First Avenger – so named as to provide us a helpful link to the Avengers movie coming next year – arguably faces the trickiest task of all three, seeing as how Americans have not been in the most patriotic of moods in recent years. Could a flag-waving superhero really find purchase with a moviegoing audience that increasingly looks askance at such notions?

Surprisingly, yes. That Captain America succeeds – and resoundingly so – is partly due to the producers’ decision to set the film during World War II, a time where patriotism is a much easier sell. (And no viewer is too jaded to not enjoy seeing Nazis eviscerated en masse.) But proper credit must be given to director Joe Johnston, who has crafted a breathlessly entertaining popcorn movie that unambiguously embraces its hero’s old-fashioned sensibilities, and invites us to embrace them as well.

Chris Evans (The Losers, Fantastic Four) plays Steve Rogers, an earnest, oft-bullied ectomorph whose lone wish is to ship off to Europe and fight on the front lines. But a plethora of physical ailments have combined to render him hopelessly unfit to serve, however stiff his resolve. (To pull off the withered look of “Skinny Steve,” the filmmakers pulled off a nifty trick, grafting Evans’ head onto the body of another actor, Leander Neely.)

Rogers’ chance arrives in the guise of a government scientist, the German émigré Dr. Abraham Erskine (Stanley Tucci, as avuncular as a German-accented man can hope to be), who witnesses the young man’s idealistic ardor and recruits him to take part in secret military experiment. After proving his mettle in training, Rogers is delivered a dose of Super Serum, a PED that instantly makes him bigger, stronger, and faster than just about any other human alive.

Which is a good thing, because on the other side of the Atlantic, a renegade Nazi scientist, Johann Schmidt aka the Red Skull (Hugo Weaving, doing a tremendous Christoph Waltz impression), has happened upon his own supernatural power source, and he’s used it to quietly amass a private army, dubbed HYDRA, that is bent on supplanting Hitler’s world-domination scheme with its own. Soon, all that stands between defeat at the hands HYDRA and its arsenal of advanced weaponry is the juiced-up visage of the newly-christened Captain America.

Portraying a stalwart straight-arrow bereft of angst or ambiguity isn’t the easiest of tasks for any actor, but Evans does a commendable job of bringing depth and humanity to a character that all too easily could have come across as bland and one-dimensional. Johnston seems to recognize this potentiality, as he looks primarily to his supporting cast to supply the personality: Tucci and Weaving stand out, as do Tommy Lee Jones and Toby Jones, playing an irascible army commander and a timid HYDRA toady, respectively. The film’s romantic spark comes courtesy of the principal cast’s lone female representative, the excellent Haley Atwell, playing Rogers’ military liaison, Agent Peggy Carter.

More than anything, Captain America is a triumph of tone. A former ILM technician, Johnston did visual effects for Raiders of the Lost Ark, and Spielberg’s 1981 blockbuster was a conscious touchstone for his film’s throwback feel and aesthetic. (Another, less deliberate influence would be a previous Johnston film, The Rocketeer.) Captain America embodies the spirit of the old serials, melded with a tongue-in-cheek comic sense and punctuated by action sequences that deploy the requisite CGI fireworks with a welcome measure of restraint. The film is decidedly of its era, but never feels gratuitously nostalgic. And its production design is gorgeous: Red Skull’s lair in particular is a treasure trove of retro-futurist designs, all of which seem directly lifted from 1940s World’s Fair exhibits.

Cast Members

Chris Evans Chris Evans Hayley Atwell Hayley Atwell Hugo Weaving Hugo Weaving Sebastian Stan Sebastian Stan

Chris Evans
Captain America/Steve Rogers
Hayley Atwell
Peggy Carter
Hugo Weaving
Red Skull
Sebastian Stan
James Buchanan "Bucky" Barnes
Tommy Lee Jones
Colonel Chester Phillips
Hugo Weaving
Johann Schmidt/Red Skull
Dominic Cooper
Howard Stark
Richard Armitage
Heinz Kruger
Stanley Tucci
Dr. Abraham Erskine
Samuel L. Jackson
Nick Fury
Toby Jones
Dr. Arnim Zola
Neal McDonough
Timothy 'Dum Dum' Dugan
Derek Luke
Gabe Jones
Kenneth Choi
Jim Morita
JJ Feild
James Montgomery Falsworth
Bruno Ricci
Jacques Dernier
Lex Shrapnel
Gilmore Hodge
Michael Brandon
Senator Brandt
Martin T. Sherman
Brandt's Aide
Natalie Dormer
Pvt. Lorraine
Oscar Pearce
Search Team Leader
William Hope
SHIELD Lieutenant
Nicholas Pinnock
SHIELD Tech
Marek Oravec
Jan
David Bradley
Tower Keeper
Leander Deeny
Steve Rogers Double/Barman
Sam Hoare
Nervous Recruit
Simon Kunz
4F Doctor
Kieran O'Connor
Loud Jerk
Jenna-Louise Coleman
Connie
Sophie Colouhoun
Bonnie
Doug Cockle
Young Doctor
Ben Batt
Enlistment Office MP
Mollie Fitzgerald
Stark Girl
Damon J. Driver
Sergeant Duffy
David McKail
Johann Schmidt's Artist
Amanda Walker
Antique Store Owner
Richard Freeman
SSR Doctor
Katherine Press
Project Rebirth Nurse
Sergio Covino
Kruger's Aide
Marcello Walton
Undercover Bum
Vincent Montuel
Undercover Bum
Fabrizio Santino
Kruger's Driver
Maxwell Newman
Boy at Dock
Anatole Taubman
Roeder
Jan Pohl
Hutter
Erich Redman
Schneider
Rosanna Hoult
Star-Spangled Singer
Naomi Slights
Star-Spangled Singer
Kirsty Mather
Star-Spangled Singer
Megan Sanderson
Kid in USO Audience
Darren Simpson
Kid in USO Audience
Fernanda Toker
Newsstand Mom
Laura Haddock
Autograph Seeker
James Payton
"Adolph Hitler"
Ronan Raftery
Army Heckler
Nick Hendrix
Army Heckler
Luke Allen-Gale
Army Heckler
Jack Gordon
Army Heckler
Ben Uttley
HYDRA Guard/HYDRA Pilot
Kevin Millington
Stark's Engineer
Patrick Monckeberg
Manager Velt
Peter Stark
HYDRA Lieutenant
Amanda Righetti
SHIELD Agent



Crew Members

Joe Johnston
Director
Kevin Feige
Producer
Stephen Broussard
Co-Producer
Victoria Alonso
Co-Producer
Mitchell Bell
Associate Producer
Nigel Gostelow
Executive Producer
Louis D'Esposito
Executive Producer
David Maisel
Executive Producer
Stratton Leopold
Executive Producer
Joe Johnston
Executive Producer
Stan Lee
Executive Producer
Alan Fine
Executive Producer
Paramount Pictures
Paramount Pictures
Christopher Markus
Screenwriter
Stephen McFeely
Screenwriter
Robert Dalva
Editor
Jeffrey Ford
Editor
Marvel Studios
Marvel Studios
Shelly Johnson
Cinematographer
Jay Maidment
Still Photographer
Matthew Sampson
Stunts Coordinator
Samar Pollitt
Second Assistant Director
Peter Mavromates
Post Production Supervisor
Barry Gibbs
Properties Master
Steve Dent
Stunts Coordinator
Shaun Gordon
Post Production Coordinator

 

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