The Wolverine (FILM REVIEW)
The Wolverine
Film
Review by Kam Williams
Jackman Journeys to Japan for Latest Adventure as
Metal-Clawed Mutant
Logan, aka Wolverine
(Hugh Jackman), is a mutant with retractable claws and a self-healing, metal
skeleton. As a member of Marvel Comics’ X-Men, he has appeared in all
five of the franchise’s prior screen adaptations, most notably, the eponymous
installment exploring his origin.
At this
episode’s point of departure, we find him in Alaska and awaking from the clever cinematic
contrivance of a nightmare within a nightmare. In the haunting dream, he’d been
confronted by Jean
Grey, aka Phoenix
(Famke Janssen), the lover/colleague gone bad he’d been forced to stab to death
in X-Men: The Last Stand.
Here, she makes him feel so guilty
about gutting her belly and aborting their baby that he promises never to hurt
anyone ever again. Trouble is, Logan
has anger management issues which cause him to morph into feral Wolverine whenever
he loses his temper, and he proceeds to break the vow the very next day in a
bar fight with a bunch of inconsiderate local yokels.
However, the film’s setting changes
from the Yukon to the Orient soon after the arrival in town of bottle red-head Yukio
(Rila Fukushima), a capable bodyguard sent by Ichiro Yashida (Haruchiko
Yamanouchi), the terminally-ill CEO of Japan’s biggest corporation. Since Logan saved Ichiro’s life when the atomic bomb was dropped
on Nagasaki,
you’d think he was being summoned for a grateful, fond farewell. Think again.
The old man suddenly wants to live
forever and has hatched a plan to steal Wolverine’s secret to immortality. And he’s
assisted in this diabolical endeavor by and army of ninjas as well as by Viper
(Svetlana Khodchenkova), an evil temptress with an immunity to toxins.
Meanwhile,
Logan is lucky
that Yukio has decided to shift loyalties from her boss to him. At this
juncture, the picture launches into a ballet-like display of non-stop martial
arts fare, the highlight being a breathtaking Kabuki dance to the death atop a
careening locomotive.
When the dust settles, Logan of course not only
emerges victorious but will have to choose whether to ride off into the Land of
the Rising Sun’s proverbial sunset with two-fisted, tomboy Yukio or with gorgeous
Mariko (Tao Okamoto), Ichiro’s granddaughter. Provided you’re
not suffering from blockbuster fatigue in this summer of sequels, this engaging
and enchanting Asian adventure definitely deserves to be added to your “Must See”
list.
Crouching
Viper, Hidden Wolverine!
Excellent
(4 stars)
Rated PG-13
for sexuality, profanity and intense violence
In English and Japanese with subtitles
Running time: 126
minutes
Distributor: 20th
Century Fox
To see a trailer for The Wolverine, visit: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=th1NTVIhUQU
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