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Results tagged “robertdowneyjr”
Out of Frame: <em>The Avengers</em>

Out of Frame: The Avengers

After six films worth of buildup, The Avengers contains something to entertain the comic book collector as well as the contemporary Hollywood fan boy. more ›

Out of Frame: <em>A Single Man</em> & <em>Sherlock Holmes</em>

Out of Frame: A Single Man & Sherlock Holmes

Two movies open tomorrow featuring British men with a fundamental and crippling fear of being alone. Both have extremely strong bonds to the men in their lives. When those men disappear, they are left alone with their worst inclinations. The two have very different coping mechanisms. For one, the answer is suicide. For the other, it is to commit enough mischief and calculated manipulation to bring his wayward partner back into his orbit. more ›

Out of Frame: <em>Tropic Thunder</em>

Out of Frame: Tropic Thunder

First things first. Let's get this whole controversy bit out of the way. Ben Stiller's Hollywood action satire, Tropic Thunder, has drawn the ire of a number of groups representing the mentally disabled. The offense is taken at a plot point which has Stiller's Tugg Speedman, an action hero desperate to be taken seriously, playing a character in the mold of Sean Penn's in I Am Sam. Speedman's performance in this past role is a ridiculously offensive (if comically well-intentioned) caricature of a developmentally challenged adult. He and his co-stars on his current feature, a gritty Vietnam War flick, refer back to his performance as "Simple Jack" using the word "retard." Seventeen times they use it, according to the also comically well-intentioned Timothy Shriver, who laments the frequent use of the "r-word" while the "n-word" is only used once. As if it might have been less egregious had there been more racial slurs. more ›

Out of Frame: <em>Iron Man</em>

Out of Frame: Iron Man

Comic books are big business. Hell, they're doing so well that they're giving the things away. The king of the comic business, Marvel, is so flush that they decided that instead of letting big movie studios buy the rights to their stories, they'd expand the movie arm of their operation into a full-fledged studio and just make them on their own. And if anyone doubted the studio's ability to make that leap, their first effort, Iron Man, should be enough to erase all doubts. more ›

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