the punisher movie review
MARVEL THE PUISHER MOVIE REVIEW:
ABOUT MOVIE:
Joss
Whedon, godfather of the geeks, hates the Punisher. And his hate isn’t just a
cutesy oh-I-don’t-believe-in-guns-and-murder hate; it’s a rather extreme if-I-were-in-charge-I’d-kill-the-Punisher
kind of hate.
Years ago, he called the Marvel antihero a ‘coward’ – the Punisher, you
see, has a controversial affinity for firearms (and using said firearms to
lethal effect). And Whedon – who has since earned the unique distinction of
having directed both Marvel’s Avengers and (partially) DC’s Justice League –
wasn’t done there. If you felt that he was being a tad unreasonable – we are,
after all, talking about a comic book character here – and questioned him, then
you were nothing but a fascist.
Well, if
you’re the betting type, here’s a safe one for you: Joss Whedon isn’t going to
like the new Netflix Punisher series. Fortunately for all of us, our enjoyment of the Punisher does
not depend on what Joss Whedon does or does not like, because not only does
Frank Castle – that’s the Punisher’s alter ego – make use of a disgustingly
huge arsenal of guns (mostly to kill, and sometimes to maim), but he does it in
what is – and I do not exaggerate when I say this – a jaw-droppingly violent
television programme.
It begins with a couple of stylishly done gunfights – not nearly as good
as anything in the John Wick movies, but effective nonetheless – and before
long, Frank’s either being tortured with merciless brutality, or he’s hacking
limbs, pounding skulls and gouging the eyes out of enemies – drenched in
buckets of blood as if poured by Quentin Tarantino himself.
It’ll be
interestingly to see how blindsided Marvel fans are going to react to this. It
might even be funny, Not many people would have expected it to have gone in the
directions that it did, but boy did it go there. The Punisher is already a
deliciously dark character, but the one we see here – remember, he was a
supporting character in season two of Daredevil, so this isn’t the first time
our paths have crossed – has already avenged the death of his wife and kids,
and yet, somehow, the fire in his soul rages on.because if humour’s what you’re
looking for, you’re not getting any out of this show.
When we meet him again in episode 1, he’s still at war – but with whom,
perhaps even he does not know. He spends his days hammering out his caged anger
on walls, and his nights trying his best to avoid trouble. But trouble has a
way of finding Frank Castle – and he isn’t the sort of guy who’d turn his back
on it. He’s the sort of guy who’d stalk it from the shadows, chase it down
alleys, and put a hole in its head. And there
lies the difference between this version of the Punisher and anything we’ve
seen before, because I distinctly remember him turning his back on a woman
being raped in Dirty Laundry, a short film based on the character, starring
Thomas Jane.
But Jon Bernthal –
by the way, what an absolute star he is – plays him more like Robert De Niro in
Taxi Driver than Christian Bale’s Batman – who is, perhaps, the closest
relative of this kind of comic book hero. But his biggest contribution to this
character is that he has made him human; hounded by nightmares of his family
being murdered before his eyes, wracked with plunging guilt, and filled with
seething rage.
Traditionally,
the Punisher has always had a Kierkegaardian black and white morality – but
Bernthal’s version is greyer than Woody Allen’s love life.
And this is reflected in the show’s visual language – most of the
characters, like the sets, are dressed in varying shades of grey. Grey suits on
dogged detectives, dirty grey walls of support group meeting rooms; steely
elevators; fluorescent bunkers; grimy, Martin Scorsese-inspired New York City
streets, the same ones Travis Bickle shuffled along on four decades ago… I
wouldn’t be surprised if in a few weeks, dozens video essays attempting to dissect
the sheer quality of filmmaking that has gone into this show pop up in my
YouTube subscriptions.
But more than anything else, the Punisher has a way of sneaking up on
you, unloading an armory-full of profundity, and reminding you, the geek, just
how drastically the world of comic book movies and TV has changed since Joss
Whedon made those comments all those years ago. We live in an era when
superhero movies and shows are so much more than just men in masks punching
other men in masks.
I’d be
willing to wager no one – not even the most ardent Punisher fan – would have
expected this show to tackle themes like PTSD, homegrown terrorism, war
veterans and gun control. But it does – and it does it with remarkable bravery
and insight. There’s no way of knowing just how mass shootings, a uniquely
American problem, will translate here – I remember seeing AK-47s being sold on
J&K footpaths like wholesale vegetables – but at least we could try.
Like its fellow Netflix/Marvel
heroes – Daredevil (legal system), Jessica Jones (sexual assault) and Luke Cage
(racism) – the Punisher is a beacon of hope in hopeless times. He’s the middle
finger in a scabbed, clenched fist, aching to lay some hurt on the corrupt and
the powerful.
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