The 10 Best Start-of-Summer-Movie-Season Films of the 21st Century | Features


5. “Iron Man 3” (2013)

Of course, this is a Christmas movie. Look at who made it. Director and co-writer Shane Black, who’d previously collaborated with Robert Downey Jr. on 2005’s “Kiss Kiss Bang Bang,” another ironic yuletide classic, took over for “Iron Man” and “Iron Man 2” director Jon Favreau, reminding audiences that Tony Stark will always be the most beloved of the Avengers. The reason, obviously, is Downey, who here gets to portray the irreverent tech genius/playboy as a more haunted individual, facing off with a frightening terrorist who goes by The Mandarin (Ben Kingsley). Subverting aspects of Iron Man’s comic book history while delivering a surlier, more soulful superhero movie, Black brought the same witty approach to action films that he incorporated into his “Lethal Weapon” script so long ago. As for Downey, he got a more epic farewell in “Avengers: Endgame,” but “Iron Man 3” might be his best Stark performance. 

4. “Mission: Impossible III” (2006)

The third chapter in the “Mission: Impossible” saga now occupies a strange corner in the franchise. At the time, it was seen as a strategic readjustment after the overblown “Mission: Impossible 2,” with J.J. Abrams (the TV guy behind “Felicity,” “Alias” and “Lost”) making his feature directorial debut. But with apologies to those who adore the Brian De Palma-helmed original, “Mission: Impossible III” is my favorite of the first three, presenting Tom Cruise’s Ethan Hunt with one of his greatest foes, Philip Seymour Hoffman’s stone-cold arms dealer Owen Davian. This was a period when people wondered if Cruise was “over”—he had appeared on “The Oprah Winfrey Show” a year earlier, resulting in the couch jump heard ‘round the world—and “III” wasn’t the blockbuster Paramount had hoped it would be. But although the subsequent sequels are superior, this 2006 film is a fleet action-thriller that pares away some of the gaudy spectacle for a gripping, James Bond-ian adventure. 

3. “Iron Man” (2008)

It was striking to see Christopher Nolan and Robert Downey Jr. together at the Oscars this year, both receiving kudos for their work on “Oppenheimer.” Sixteen years earlier, they had rocked the industry in a completely different way. In July 2008, “The Dark Knight” profoundly changed how Hollywood approached superhero films—meanwhile, two months earlier, “Iron Man” announced there was a new sheriff in town, the colossus known as Marvel. Director Jon Favreau had made the appealing Christmas film “Elf,” and Downey had once been a beloved actor, although his addiction issues had, for a time, rendered him practically unemployable. Unlikely as it might have seemed back then, the two of them created a template for Marvel films that would soon become the envy of the industry. “The Dark Knight” remains the better movie, but “Iron Man” gave the world Downey’s impossibly charming, amusingly arrogant Tony Stark, whose world of fast cars, cool gadgets, and expensive digs could rival Bruce Wayne’s—who seemed way more troubled than this grinning smartass. Everything Marvel would achieve over the next 11 years of global box office dominance springs from here.

You can view the original article HERE.

‘I felt like I had a huge responsibility’
This Toxic Latine Mentality Held Me Back From Storytelling
Sharon Stone and Liam Neeson Defend Kevin Spacey, Want Him Acting Again
Former QB says Netflix skewering ‘affected my kids,’ Nikki Glaser thinks he knew ‘exactly what he was getting into’
Babes movie review & film summary (2024)
The Show is Hotter Than Ever, Dearest Reader
Francis Ford Coppola’s Megalopolis Debuts a Divided Rotten Tomatoes Score, Boos Accompany 7-Minute Standing Ovation
Cannes 2024: The Girl with the Needle, Wild Diamond | Festivals & Awards
Rosie Jones deletes X/Twitter account due to “hurtful” comments
TWICE’s Nayeon teases collabs with Lee Chan-hyuk and more
AIR to live-stream their ‘Moon Safari’ show at London’s Royal Albert Hall
Marilyn Manson seems to have signed new record deal with Nuclear Blast amidst abuse allegations
Steinbrenner open to in-season talks with Soto
5 best weeks on the NFL’s 2024 schedule
Celtics close out Cavs to reach 3rd straight East finals
Nets retiring Carter’s jersey next season
Young Sheldon Finale’s Huge Viewership Revealed, EP shares Insight into Delivering a Hopeful Ending to the Series
Grey’s Anatomy Season 20 Episode 8 Review: Blood, Sweat, and Tears
Young Sheldon Spinoff Adds Two More Fan-Favorite Characters
Chicago PD Season 11 Episode 12 Review: Inventory
Free People We the Free Boomerang Long Shorts Review
Zimmerman’s Chic Summer Concept Store Splashes Into Le Bon Marché!
Best Sale Items From Gap
Kendall Jenner’s Latest Project? A Sweet New Erewhon Collaboration!