Gapers Block
November 12, 2004
The Incredibles





Directed
by Brad Bird.
Starring Craig T. Nelson, Holly Hunter, Sarah Vowell, Spencer
Fox, Samuel L. Jackson, Jason Lee, Elizabeth Peña and
Brad Bird.
The Iron Giant





Directed by Brad Bird.
Starring Jennifer Aniston, Harry Connick Jr., Vin Diesel, Christopher
McDonald, John Mahoney and Eli Marienthal.
Brad Bird's first feature film, The Iron Giant, was
a tiny masterpiece that, despite almost universal critical acclaim,
slipped in and out of theaters with almost no audience whatsoever.
(The film made back only half of its $50 million budget.) Loosely
based on Ted Hughes' 1968 children's book, The Iron Man,
the less-suable-by-Marvel-Comics Iron Giant is the
story of Hogarth Hughes (Eli Marienthal) and his giant, monosyllabic
robot (a perfectly typecast Vin Diesel) from outer space, set
during the Russophobic 1950s. Sent to investigate what is initially
believed to be a meteorite landing, Kent Mansley (Happy Gilmore's
Christopher McDonald) quickly learns that something else is
wandering out in the woods near the Hughes' home. Once Mansley
finds his proof, General Rogard (Frasier's John Mahoney) comes
in to destroy the giant at all costs. At turns hilarious, poignant
and thrilling, The Iron Giant gets a bit heavy-handed with its
anti-gun message, but not so much so that those of us without
racks on our pick-ups would be turned off.
Terrific animation by the short-lived Warner Brothers Feature
Animation Division (in its second and final production, after
the disastrous Quest for Camelot) provides the only
seamless integration of computer-generated and 2D animation
that I've ever seen. By adding outlines to the robot and the
various vehicles, and by not over-rendering them, Brad Bird's
team created a giant robot that comes across like a giant kid,
in the best possible way. When the army sets off the giant's
defense mechanisms, all hell breaks loose. The Iron Giant
was like nothing before or since -- that is, until The Incredibles
came out last weekend.
Cribbing a plot point (and that's not all) from the greatest
of all superhero comic books, Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons' Watchmen,
The Incredibles centers on Bob Parr, a.k.a. Mr. Incredible
(Craig T. Nelson), who has been forcibly retired for the past
15 years, and sent with his family into hiding through something
like the FBI Witness Protection Program, as have all of the
other "Supers." ("Super-hero" is a trademark
jointly owned by Marvel and DC Comics.) But he isn't the only
Super in the family. His wife Helen, the former Elastigirl (Holly
Hunter), can stretch her body like the Fantastic Four's Mr.
Fantastic. Their two older children have superpowers as well:
the roughly 14-year-old Violet (This American Life's Sarah Vowell)
can turn invisible and create force fields just like the Fantastic
Four's Invisible Girl, and Dash (Spencer Fox) is super fast,
like the Flash. Only the baby, Jack-Jack, seems to have no powers
at all.
Bob, who has superstrength and some level of invulnerability,
occasionally relives the good old days with his pal Lucius,
a.k.a. Frozone (Samuel L. Jackson), who can create ice from
the moisture in the air, like Iceman, but Bob's adventures attract
attention. When a mysterious woman named Mirage (Elizabeth Peña)
identifies Bob as Mr. Incredible, she presents him an offer
he can't refuse: the opportunity to be a Super again. He gets
back in shape and outfits himself with a new costume courtesy
of his old designer, Edna Mode (a hilarious, scene-stealing
performance by none other than director Brad Bird). But Bob
doesn't realize that Mirage's shadowy employer has ties to his
golden days…
Also reminiscent of Watchmen, which featured variations
of the obscure Charlton Comics characters that Watchmen
publisher DC Comics had just purchased, the powers of the major
characters in The Incredibles are almost all obvious
riffs on familiar DC or Marvel superheroes. However, their personalities
are changed enough that they rise above mere carbon copies.
In addition, the family dynamic (not to mention one especially
familiar villain) makes it clear that the Incredibles themselves
are a thinly-disguised variation on the Fantastic Four, minus
the elemental motif and the silly origin. But while some critics
have mistaken the derivative and comedic elements of The
Incredibles for parody, it's not. It's a periodically light-hearted
superhero action flick, but it is firmly entrenched in its genre,
not a parody of it. Bird is brilliantly using the existing characters
as the basis for a mythology, and even a passing familiarity
with the source of his borrowed ideas adds depth to the background
of an already richly textured film.
In the first half-hour of the film, we see a fair amount of
history concerning how things were before the Supers went into
hiding and what Mr. Incredible has been doing in the 15 years
since. This provides much more back story than any Pixar film
to date. But, with a running time just shy of two hours, we
get more story than in any Pixar film to date, too. I quickly
realized I was watching something Pixar had never done before:
The Incredibles is not an outright kiddie flick like
Finding Nemo or the Toy Story movies. Instead,
The Incredibles is an action-adventure story aimed
at a somewhat older crowd, along the lines of the Indiana Jones
movies or the original Star Wars trilogy, and the pacing
of the story follows suit. Some critics have called the first
half-hour of the film slow-paced, but they are saying that in
the wrong context. The first act of the film is only slow-paced
compared to Finding Nemo or other children's movies.
When compared, as it should be, to other superhero films, live-action
and animated ones alike, it speeds by faster than a speeding
bullet.
Live-action superhero films such as X-Men 2 or Spider-Man
2 cost $125-200 million to make and only have relatively
few, small-scale action sequences to show for it. But the $92
million budget of The Incredibles can stretch much
further because it is animated. Never mind that super-hero costumes
just look faintly ridiculous on real people; if every shot in
an animated film is a special effect, why should it cost significantly
more to make that shot an action sequence, as live-action action
sequences do? Without the need to add another budget-minded
scene of Peter Parker or Superman agonizing over whether or
not to take up the costume again before finally trouncing the
bad guys, The Incredibles is able to stage action sequence
after action sequence, tapping the full potential of the superhero
genre, arguably for the first time on film.
Yet The Incredibles is far from just a lightning-paced,
slam-bang action picture. The human element so prominent in
Bird's Iron Giant and all of Pixar's films remains
at the forefront of this film, too. Pixar's animation team manages
to convey human form and movement shockingly well in their first
film featuring an all-human cast of characters. For example,
the hair is amazing: wet, blowing in the air or just hanging
in front of Violet's face, it looks almost real. On a different
head, it probably would look real, except that Pixar does not
make the mistake of trying to duplicate reality that the upcoming
Robert Zemeckis-engineered Polar Express makes. Where
Polar Express looks as if fresh corpses have been propped
up on broomsticks and shaken around for your amusement, the
world of The Incredibles, from its cars to the chin
on Mr. Incredible's head, is a beautifully sleek, streamlined
'60s-inspired affair, bursting with energy.
Absolutely note-perfect, The Incredibles is hands-down
the most faithful, most exciting and most intelligent superhero
movie ever made. But The Incredibles is even more than
that: it is also one of the finest animated films ever made
and one of the most purely enjoyable films, animated or otherwise,
I've seen this year or any year.
The Incredibles is playing in theaters everywhere.
It is rated PG for action violence: people die (off-screen or
hidden by explosions), guns are fired and other scariness occurs
for which the little tykes might not be ready, but it is nothing
worse than anything in the original Star Wars movies.
Although The Incredibles is not exactly cute or cuddly,
compared to Pixar's earlier work, the short film before it,
the huggable "Boundin'," is more than enough of both
to satisfy any need you may have for either.
The Iron Giant: Special Edition DVD will be released
November 16, with a new digital transfer, commentary track,
deleted scenes and eight featurettes on the making of the film
that weren't on its initial DVD release. It is rated PG for
violence and mild language. Rent it. For the love of God, rent
it.