Get involved: send your photos, videos, news & views by texting 'OXFORD NEWS' to 80360 or email »
5:37pm Wednesday 30th April 2008
The tug-of-war between altruism and materialism is at the heart of Iron Man, Jon Favreau's marvellous nuts and bolts realisation of the red and gold armoured Marvel Comics superhero, writes Damon Smith. Following the lead of the Spider-Man and X-Men franchises, Favreau devotes the majority of the opening hour to the characters. He fleshes out their personalities, insecurities and the underlying tensions (attraction, jealousy, irritation) which light the fuse on an action-oriented second half, awash with spectacular visual effects.
The central role of a billionaire industrialist, whose conscience is pricked after a brush with death, fits Robert Downey Jr like a titanium-plated glove. He's charming and roguish yet reckless with other people's emotions, and he galvanizes a sizzling screen chemistry with Gwyneth Paltrow as the personal assistant who barely flutters an eyelash at the endlessly array of one-night stands who parade through her employer's cliff-side mansion.
Brilliant inventor and consummate playboy Tony Stark (Downey Jr) is held hostage in Afghanistan by insurgents under the command of Raza (Faran Tahir), who demands that he builds a devastating Jericho missile for use against US forces. Instead, Tony and fellow prisoner of war Yinsen (Shaun Toub) use the time in captivity to fashion an ultra-strong suit of armour and orchestrate a daring escape.
Found wandering the desert by his good friend, Lieutenant Colonel James 'Rhodey' Rhodes (Terrence Howard), Tony returns to America a changed man. "I saw young Americans killed by the very weapons I created to protect them," he tells a crowded press conference. He then announces the immediate shutdown of the weapons manufacturing arm of Stark Industries, to the shock and surprise of right-hand man Obadiah Stane (Jeff Bridges). Unfortunately, members of the board freeze out Tony and soon he is fighting for control of his own company, aided by his feisty assistant, Virginia "Pepper" Potts (Paltrow).
Iron Man is terrifically entertaining, fuelled by Favreau's kinetic direction, strong performances and some thrilling action sequences. Downey Jr relishes the comic asides of his character before the transformation into his eponymous alter ego.
Repartee with Paltrow promises plenty of laughs. Bridges adds plenty of bombast but Howard is almost surplus to requirements. Potential for a bigger role in the sequel is made explicit when Rhodey stares at a spare Iron Man suit and sighs: "Maybe next time."
Next week is The Oxford Times Wine Club Christmas Tasting and, with just four weeks to go until Christmas Day, it is an excellent opportunity to sample a specially-selected range of wines for the festive season.
One of the pictures on this page gives a good impression of the delights to be enjoyed at the Mole and Chicken on one of those sunny days that now seem as far as can be from our present situation.
I had trouble shifting my +1 for the musical Imagine This, which opened last week at the New London Theatre. No-one was interested (one German friend would have come, but funnily enough I hadn’t thought to ask him), and while nobody actually said, “Sounds like a gas”, there were plenty of unprintable responses, averaging out at: “Holocaust – the musical? Um, no thanks . . . ”
Another winter rolls in and, to cheer our spirits, Oxfordshire Touring Theatre Company travel hither and yon through the county with colour, music and fun trailing in their wake. For those of us who live in villages these harbingers of the festive season are a welcome sight.
Applications to be the next manager of Oxford United have been pouring in.
Enter your postcode, town or place name
Find your next job now in Oxfordshire
Search Now »
Make a date in Oxfordshire now!
Search Now »
Oxfordshire homes for sale and to let
Search Now »
Cars for sale in Oxfordshire
Search Now »