1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- More *Four* Bore, 30 April 2008
Author:
dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
There's something about the Fantastic Four that's not all that
fantastic: it's called acting.
Listened to Joe Satriani's Surfing with the Alien before spanking this
review 'twas the only way I was gonna charge the cells after watching
the soporific, yet tenuously linked Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver
Surfer. As some of you 80s steel-belted wardogs know, Surfing was
Satriani's 1987 horse-powered second album and kick in the nuts to the
gods of guitar, featuring none other than Marvel Comic's Silver Surfer
on its cover.
In Rise, the principle cast returns from Fantastic Four (2005), and
promptly continues doing what they did in the previous film: not act -
Ioan Gruffud (stretching a premise as Mr. Fantastic/Reed Richards),
Jessica Alba (out-acted by her bra again as Invisible Girl/Sue Storm),
Chris Evans (flamed by his CGI alter-ego, Human Torch/Johnny Storm) and
Michael Chiklis (supposedly a rock, but indiscernible from wood, as
Thing/Ben Grimm).
Like the title track on Satriani's album, director Tim Story's Rise is
a blistering juggernaut, a sliding, gliding tour de force of
kineticism, with the Silver Surfer himself the coolest saboteur
provocateur this side of Darth Vader (Doug Jones embodying Surfer's
glittering form and Larry Fishburne dropping his Morpheus on Silvie's
vocals); an interplanetary herald of destruction sent by Galactus, the
consumer of worlds
The set pieces (the Thames emptying near the London Eye, the Surfer's
chase sequences, cosmic clouds clawing their way around Earth) are
massive spectacles which keep the 12-year-old contingent happy, but
writers Don Payne, Mark Frost and John Turman, though trying hard to
put emotional 'nads on the script, are subsumed by the summer stupidity
of the director.
The ice-veined Surfer's dark origins and darker purpose are given short
shrift (he's from a planet which will be consumed by an entity insane
with lustful power, were it not for his promise to seek out other
planets for that entity, Galactus, to eat); what could have been epic
and disturbing is handled with gloved thumbs by director Story and
egregious so-called performances by egregious so-called actors.
The Surfer himself, though, stands above and beyond any puerile human
morality or notion of thespianism in every sense, he's UNREAL!
With all that queuing for the first iPhones, seems Reed Richards had
one before anyone, as it constantly rings at his paparazzi-laden
nuptials, alerts him to radiation levels, breaks up his wedding,
connects to the internet AND does half his acting for him; while his
bride-to-be, Sue Storm, assumes her dream-killing role and starts
bitching about "leading a normal life" and eschewing their tight-suited
superhero roles before Reed has even had time to wipe the bachelor
party stripper lipstick off his tool.
And Reed's just the type of puss to give in to her, but this subplot is
quickly forgotten when the Silver Surfer rides by with no clothes on
and everything starts getting pear shaped.
The army deploy the Four to capture the Surfer and Reed gets his
intelligentsia on when he retorts to General Hager (Andre Braugher)
that even though he was raised as a geek and not a quarterback, he's
still rich, famous and marrying "the hottest woman on Earth," whereupon
Jessica Alba's dumb head grows larger than the Thing's thing. Chalk up
one for the nerd patrol, but did he have to be such a nerd about it?
The Four are forced to ally with Dr. Doom (Julian McMahon), their
nemesis from the first movie, who has come back to life because in
movies you can do that. Doom's ulterior agenda is to channel the
Surfer's power, which he progresses in full view of everyone without
them being the wiser - because in movies you can do that.
Earth is next on the menu for Galactus, who has employed the Surfer to
drill holes in the Earth almost as big as Jessica Alba's head, to
presumably poke his cosmic fingers into them like a bowling ball and
pop us into his mouth like finger food. The Four knock the Surfer off
his board (which supplied his limitless power) by using Reed's waffle
maker, whereupon the Army immediately tie Silvie to a table and torture
him for no reason - you know, standard American Military Procedure.
And while Doom makes off with the Surfer's board, fanboys hold
candlelight vigils for the death of authenticity in Surfer canon, the
board had nothing to do with his power.
Another track on Surfing With The Alien was Always With Me, Always With
You, where Satriani (one of the most lethal gunslingers of the modern
age - after Hendrix, and Eddie and - no time to dispute the merits of
axe-worship) displays the flip side to bombast and bluster subtlety
and taste, something which Rise lacks as much as acting.
While Doom surfs around on his commandeered board, firing "bzzz" things
from his hands (because we've got this special effects budget we
might as well use it) and the Four chase him in a flying bathtub,
Galactus envelops Earth (represented by a cosmic cloud see Movie
Convention Number Twelve-a). And the Silver Surfer is the only naked
shiny thing who can save the day.
The Four's teamwork reclaims the board, whereupon Sue Storm dies and
the Surfer Tampers In God's Domain to bring her back to life because
in movies you but you get the picture by now, right?...
Surfer dude goes totally tubular surfing directly into Galactus' cloudy
interior and I dunno, farting or something, which makes Galactus
explode in a shockwave that should have thrown Earth out of orbit, but
instead just damaged Japan a little, which was fortunately covered by
its Godzilla insurance.
Guess you hold the power of a god when you're Surfing With The Alien.
Just ask Joe Satriani
Quicklinks
Top Links
trailers and videosfull cast and crewtriviaofficial sitesmemorable quotesOverview
main detailscombined detailsfull cast and crewcompany creditstv scheduleAwards & Reviews
user commentsexternal reviewsnewsgroup reviewsawardsuser ratingsparents guiderecommendationsmessage boardPlot & Quotes
plot summaryplot synopsisplot keywordsAmazon.com summarymemorable quotesFun Stuff
triviagoofssoundtrack listingcrazy creditsalternate versionsmovie connectionsFAQOther Info
merchandising linksbox office/businessrelease datesfilming locationstechnical specslaserdisc detailsDVD detailsliterature listingsnews articlesPromotional
taglinestrailers and videospostersphoto galleryExternal Links
showtimesofficial sitesmiscellaneousphotographssound clipsvideo clipsIMDb user comments for
4: Rise of the Silver Surfer (2007)
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-

More *Four* Bore, 30 April 2008
Author: dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
There's something about the Fantastic Four that's not all that fantastic: it's called acting.
Listened to Joe Satriani's Surfing with the Alien before spanking this review 'twas the only way I was gonna charge the cells after watching the soporific, yet tenuously linked Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer. As some of you 80s steel-belted wardogs know, Surfing was Satriani's 1987 horse-powered second album and kick in the nuts to the gods of guitar, featuring none other than Marvel Comic's Silver Surfer on its cover.
In Rise, the principle cast returns from Fantastic Four (2005), and promptly continues doing what they did in the previous film: not act - Ioan Gruffud (stretching a premise as Mr. Fantastic/Reed Richards), Jessica Alba (out-acted by her bra again as Invisible Girl/Sue Storm), Chris Evans (flamed by his CGI alter-ego, Human Torch/Johnny Storm) and Michael Chiklis (supposedly a rock, but indiscernible from wood, as Thing/Ben Grimm).
Like the title track on Satriani's album, director Tim Story's Rise is a blistering juggernaut, a sliding, gliding tour de force of kineticism, with the Silver Surfer himself the coolest saboteur provocateur this side of Darth Vader (Doug Jones embodying Surfer's glittering form and Larry Fishburne dropping his Morpheus on Silvie's vocals); an interplanetary herald of destruction sent by Galactus, the consumer of worlds
The set pieces (the Thames emptying near the London Eye, the Surfer's chase sequences, cosmic clouds clawing their way around Earth) are massive spectacles which keep the 12-year-old contingent happy, but writers Don Payne, Mark Frost and John Turman, though trying hard to put emotional 'nads on the script, are subsumed by the summer stupidity of the director.
The ice-veined Surfer's dark origins and darker purpose are given short shrift (he's from a planet which will be consumed by an entity insane with lustful power, were it not for his promise to seek out other planets for that entity, Galactus, to eat); what could have been epic and disturbing is handled with gloved thumbs by director Story and egregious so-called performances by egregious so-called actors.
The Surfer himself, though, stands above and beyond any puerile human morality or notion of thespianism in every sense, he's UNREAL!
With all that queuing for the first iPhones, seems Reed Richards had one before anyone, as it constantly rings at his paparazzi-laden nuptials, alerts him to radiation levels, breaks up his wedding, connects to the internet AND does half his acting for him; while his bride-to-be, Sue Storm, assumes her dream-killing role and starts bitching about "leading a normal life" and eschewing their tight-suited superhero roles before Reed has even had time to wipe the bachelor party stripper lipstick off his tool.
And Reed's just the type of puss to give in to her, but this subplot is quickly forgotten when the Silver Surfer rides by with no clothes on and everything starts getting pear shaped.
The army deploy the Four to capture the Surfer and Reed gets his intelligentsia on when he retorts to General Hager (Andre Braugher) that even though he was raised as a geek and not a quarterback, he's still rich, famous and marrying "the hottest woman on Earth," whereupon Jessica Alba's dumb head grows larger than the Thing's thing. Chalk up one for the nerd patrol, but did he have to be such a nerd about it?
The Four are forced to ally with Dr. Doom (Julian McMahon), their nemesis from the first movie, who has come back to life because in movies you can do that. Doom's ulterior agenda is to channel the Surfer's power, which he progresses in full view of everyone without them being the wiser - because in movies you can do that.
Earth is next on the menu for Galactus, who has employed the Surfer to drill holes in the Earth almost as big as Jessica Alba's head, to presumably poke his cosmic fingers into them like a bowling ball and pop us into his mouth like finger food. The Four knock the Surfer off his board (which supplied his limitless power) by using Reed's waffle maker, whereupon the Army immediately tie Silvie to a table and torture him for no reason - you know, standard American Military Procedure.
And while Doom makes off with the Surfer's board, fanboys hold candlelight vigils for the death of authenticity in Surfer canon, the board had nothing to do with his power.
Another track on Surfing With The Alien was Always With Me, Always With You, where Satriani (one of the most lethal gunslingers of the modern age - after Hendrix, and Eddie and - no time to dispute the merits of axe-worship) displays the flip side to bombast and bluster subtlety and taste, something which Rise lacks as much as acting.
While Doom surfs around on his commandeered board, firing "bzzz" things from his hands (because we've got this special effects budget we might as well use it) and the Four chase him in a flying bathtub, Galactus envelops Earth (represented by a cosmic cloud see Movie Convention Number Twelve-a). And the Silver Surfer is the only naked shiny thing who can save the day.
The Four's teamwork reclaims the board, whereupon Sue Storm dies and the Surfer Tampers In God's Domain to bring her back to life because in movies you but you get the picture by now, right?...
Surfer dude goes totally tubular surfing directly into Galactus' cloudy interior and I dunno, farting or something, which makes Galactus explode in a shockwave that should have thrown Earth out of orbit, but instead just damaged Japan a little, which was fortunately covered by its Godzilla insurance.
Guess you hold the power of a god when you're Surfing With The Alien. Just ask Joe Satriani
386 comments in total
Add another comment
Related Links