The Spirit Movie Review
The Spirit Review

"The Spirit" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Frank MillerProducer : Deborah Del Prete,Gigi Pritzker,Michael E. Uslan
Screenwiter : Frank Miller
Starring : Gabriel Macht,Eva Mendes,Samuel L. Jackson,Sarah Paulson,Dan Laura,Paz Vega,Eric Balfour,Scarlett Johansson,Louis Lombardi,Stana Katic,Jaime King
It's been too long since we've had a proper comic book superhero on the screen.
There's been enough of them running around and bashing up the bad guys in a
CGI-enhanced fashion, that's for sure. But it's hard to look at the recent
cinematic incarnations of Tony Stark and Bruce Wayne and call them
"superheroes;" even if they keep their identities secret and have nifty
outfits. "Billionaire action figures" would be more appropriate, what with all
their high-priced gadgetry and super-duper hideouts. Whatever happened to the
caped heroes who kept an eye on the city's dark alleys and took out the bad
guys with nothing more than a sock to the jaw?
Frank Miller's jazzy The Spirit answers that question with a cocky wink and a
grin. The streets of Central City are almost always dark and threatening, but
they're watched over by a guardian who used to be a cop named Denny Colt
(Gabriel Macht, wonderfully deadpan). One near-death experience later and Colt
has dug himself out of his own grave. He then decides to serve the city as a
masked avenger known as The Spirit, whose only weapons are a newfound ability
to absorb ridiculous amounts of punishment and his fists.
There's a supervillain out there called The Octopus (played with rarely-seen
operatic relish by Samuel L. Jackson) and a squad of curvaceous femme fatales
(Eva Mendes, Scarlett Johansson, and Paz Vega, to name just a view of the
film's many pouty-lipped vixens) to fall in dangerous love with. The Octopus
wants something that will make him invincible, and he's going after an old
flame of The Spirit's to get it. So The Spirit leaps into the snowy night, long
duster like a cape and blood-red tie flapping in the wind as he bounds across
rooftops and intones odes to the object of his affection, the city: "She's my
sweetheart, my play thing." And then he gets beat up; a lot. But he always has
a quip to spit out the side of his mouth, and a friendly cat who's frequently
nearby for him to gripe to.
It's surprising that one of the year's most refreshingly fun films would come
from the man who helped Robert Rodriguez create the infinite loop of
mind-numbing sadism that was Sin City (tongue-in-cheek or not, after the
thirteenth pistol whipping, it got old). This time out, graphic novelist Miller
takes the directorial reins himself to adapt that comic-book touchstone, the
late Will Eisner's mid-century superhero series. While Eisner's classical
storytelling verve and soft-touch humanity would seem an odd fit for Miller --
whose most famous works, like Sin City and The Dark Knight Returns -- are
lavished with cynical ultra-violence, the two artists' viewpoints mesh rather
beautifully here.
As in Sin City, each frame of The Spirit is more painted than filmed. Miller's
performers work inside cartoonish cityscapes that draw equally from his own
jagged style and Eisner's Sunday funnies look. It's a frankly gorgeous effect,
liberated by the fact that Miller adapted freely from Eisner's panels -- the
two were longtime friends -- to create an organic story instead of slavishly
following the master's work.
Although The Spirit is in part a classic superhero story, with a square-jawed
hero who knows how to take a punch and kiss a dame until she's weak in the
knees, it's also a freeform lark that has more fun than anything that has been
coming out of the Marvel sausage factory. What with flocks of cloned idiot
henchmen (all played by Louis Lombardi) available for easy slapstick, and the
Octopus' tendency toward elaborate costumery (one scene has him and his
hench-girl in samurai-gear, another in full SS regalia), there's a drift here
toward full-on giddy surrealism that beats anything you'll find in the next
Incredible Hulk.
In short, it's neat-o.
Headin' up the the spirit in the sky.
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Review by Chris Barsanti
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