Green Lantern (3D) **
Dir. Martin Campbell. 114mins. Grand Cinemas, Empire Theatres. June 16
Movie review
From Time Out London
Hope springs eternal for the modern Hollywood
superhero movie: someday, somehow, someone is going to make a real
stunner. (Law of averages, right?) You feel a twinge of that
let’s-do-better ambition at the start of ‘Green Lantern’, as the camera
soars over a digital, yet still beautifully designed, moonscape where
three alien life forms stumble on something unholy. The scene might have
been transplanted directly from a 1950s space adventure like ‘Forbidden
Planet’. But no sooner are we introduced to giant-floating-head
supervillain Parallax – who’s out to destroy the Lanterns, the
universe’s cadre of guardians – than the film takes a ruinous detour to
Earth.
Enter square-jawed daredevil Hal Jordan (Ryan Reynolds),
he of the Ken doll physique and perfunctorily addressed daddy issues.
The guy needs a calling, dammit! And boy, does he get one after being
summoned to the side of a fallen Lantern, who gifts him his
laser-lightshow ring and cosmos-protecting powers. Time to kick it into
high gear, right? Uh, sure, just after we attend to Hal’s nonstarter
romance with plastic girl Carol Ferris (Blake Lively, who isn’t). Oh, and there’s this other supervillain we gotta deal with – Hector Hammond (Peter Sarsgaard, made up with a hilarious John Carpenter-esque bald pate).
Hal
eventually travels to the mystical corps-HQ planet of Oa for some
sequel-ready one-upmanship with baddie-in-training Sinestro (Mark Strong), and the film’s very talented director, Martin Campbell
(‘Casino Royale’), handles these otherworld scenes, as well as the
finale’s tentacle-tastic Parallax fight, with expected aplomb. But
whenever this Lantern returns to terra firma (too often), its
imaginative flights are ground beneath the DC overlords’
demographic-pandering heels.
Author: Keith Uhlich, Time Out New York
Time Out London Issue 2130: June 16 – June 22, 2011