Movie Iron Man 3| Iron Man 3 Review| Iron Man 3 Rating | Book online Movie Tickets
Iron Man 3review, Movie Iron Man 3 is up with 4 stars , starring Robert Downey Jr, has a charismatic hero, gut-shaking explosions, even jokes about rep theatre and Downton Abbey.
Summer blockbusters can get just fine without a spark of genius, but a spark of personality is essential. You can feel its absence in the Transformers, GI Joe and Fast & Furious series. Films designed for the international market, shot in a kind of dumbo Esperanto that plays almost anywhere and delights almost no one-says the Telegraph.
The delight and astonishment that Iron Man 3, the seventh film in Disney and Marvel Studios’ Avengers superhero franchise, contains jokes about Croydon, Downton Abbey and repertory theatre. The culprit is probably Drew Pearce, a Scottish screenwriter whose highest-profile work pre-Iron Man was No Heroics, a sitcom for ITV2.
The Incredible Hulk and Captain America occupied elsewhere, Stark must tangle solo with two new villains. They are Ben Kingsley’s The Mandarin (below), a bin Laden-like fearmonger with the US President in his sights, and Guy Pearce’s Aldrich Killian, a dashingly handsome chemist (here we really do enter the realms of fantasy) with a serum that turns people into living bombs.
Summer blockbusters can get just fine without a spark of genius, but a spark of personality is essential. You can feel its absence in the Transformers, GI Joe and Fast & Furious series. Films designed for the international market, shot in a kind of dumbo Esperanto that plays almost anywhere and delights almost no one-says the Telegraph.
The delight and astonishment that Iron Man 3, the seventh film in Disney and Marvel Studios’ Avengers superhero franchise, contains jokes about Croydon, Downton Abbey and repertory theatre. The culprit is probably Drew Pearce, a Scottish screenwriter whose highest-profile work pre-Iron Man was No Heroics, a sitcom for ITV2.
The Incredible Hulk and Captain America occupied elsewhere, Stark must tangle solo with two new villains. They are Ben Kingsley’s The Mandarin (below), a bin Laden-like fearmonger with the US President in his sights, and Guy Pearce’s Aldrich Killian, a dashingly handsome chemist (here we really do enter the realms of fantasy) with a serum that turns people into living bombs.
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