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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
In last weeks episode..., 25 Feb 2005
By A Customer
Most people reading these reviews will be aware of what Sky Captain is- a tribute to the Republic serials of the thirties and forties. The movie encapuslates some other elements of classic pulp material too, but its look is all old-cinema.Stylistically the film can't be faulted- its image is spot on throughout, from the faint blurring to the use of heavy shadow, noir-style lighting. Even the framing of shots and shortcuts (mini-crowds for example) are produced in the conventions of the thirties and forties. The whole of the graphics lends itself to posters of the time and similar material. It is impossible to tell what is real and what is not- the computer-graphics are remarkable (most of what is seen isn't physcially real). The technical achievements are great. The story follows the typical style of a serial- according to the commentaries the original script was to have seven chapters, it would have been interesting to see this implemented with a cliff-hanger on each one! there is a great deal of action, and some exposition. The plot is straightforward, but inventive, and continually pushes forwards to the very end. The global threat starts small and builds gradually from a bit of detective work to dramatic dog-fights and a multitude of secret bases! The acting is very good from all in the movie. There have been criticisms of the acting being wooden, but this isn't really the case. The acting matches the style of the times the movie is set in, and paying tribute too. It also feels genuine, and is often very funny (intentionally)- the classic being the much-quoted Angelina Jolie line "Alert the Amphibious Squadron!". It is hard to see what audience is being targeted by the film, if any- the movie is what it is and it does it very well. Essentially this is an action-adventure, but its styling is so strong that many may not understand or appreciate it- "why watch a black and white action film with stilted dialogue when I can watch a colour movie full of expletives?!". Anyone who avidly watched TV reruns of Republic serials will love it (King of the Rocket Men, Undersea Kingdom, Flash Gordon etc). Anyone who likes something a bit different will love it too. Overall I think this film is great and well worth watching for its overt, yet unobtrusive, use of CGI (Laurence Olivier appears in a supporting role, despite being dead...)- its styling is a remarkable achievement and it is a genuinely fun adventure story firmly in the pulp tradition. Good for kids of all ages!
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