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Page 34 THE VILLADOM TIMES I, II, III & IV • August 7, 2013
‘The Wolverine’ goes beyond muscles and mayhem
by Dennis Seuling
One of the problems faced by filmmakers who work
on franchises is playing to both the franchise’s fan base
and the general audience. There is no sense alienating
either of those audience segments, since box office dol-
lars are at stake.
It is the rare franchise picture that fits the mythos
and still works as a stand-alone entity. “The Wolverine,”
an extremely literate superhero movie, is one of those
films. Wandering the Yukon in a self-imposed exile after
killing his beloved Jean Grey (Famke Janssen) to save
the world, Wolverine (Hugh Jackman) is summoned to
Tokyo by Yashida (Hal Yamanouchi), the dying Japa-
nese billionaire Wolverine rescued from atomic annihi-
lation in Nagasaki.
Now facing unfamiliar surroundings and a different
culture, he is doubly the outsider as both a mutant and
a fish out of water. Logan, Wolverine’s alter ego, must
acclimate himself to customs and rituals that go directly
against his savage instincts. Along the way, Wolver-
ine contends with an assortment of ninjas, samurais,
yakuza, and a mysterious blonde named Viper (Svetlana
Khodchenkova), who might be a mutant. In the midst of
new adversaries, Wolverine must rely on new means to
defend himself. When one of his most important powers
is lost, he becomes particularly vulnerable.
Hugh Jackman in a scene from ‘The Wolverine.’
Jackman is especially effective in this, his sixth
outing as the clawed mutant. With muscles bulging and
veins popping, he has turned himself into the picture’s
primary special effect by means of rigorous physical
conditioning and a special diet that has bulked him up,
making him a comic book illustration come to life. His
pained expression and scowls often make him look like
a constipated bodybuilder.
“The Wolverine” is one of the more character-driven
superhero films of the last few years. Without bogging
down the pace, it spends time delving into Logan’s inner
demons, guilt, and sense of honor. This is one conflicted
mutant, and his personal turmoil makes him all the more
engaging and intriguing. Jackman does some first-rate
acting. Director James Mangold provides plenty of action,
particularly a wild scene staged in, and on top of, a bullet
train racing at hundreds of miles per hour. This is a text-
book example of how to use computer generated images
to enhance and advance a story rather than merely show-
case technology. There are also meticulously choreo-
graphed fight scenes throughout which Wolverine gets
to bare his claws and cause some serious chaos.
The plot, which is filled with twists, deceit, conflict,
and drama, ultimately builds to a loud crescendo. At this
point, Mangold resorts to a number of clichés, but by
then the viewer is hooked and goes along for the ride.
The film’s primary flaw is a gratuitous romantic
subplot between Logan and Yashida’s granddaughter,
Mariko (Tao Okamoto). This is an odd choice in a movie
clearly geared to appeal to fans of action and adventure.
Admittedly, there are some very good roles in “The Wol-
verine” for women, but the romance seems purposefully
tacked on to widen the flick’s appeal to a female audi-
ence. Rated PG-13, “The Wolverine” is a pleasant surprise,
particularly in light of the far inferior “X-Men Ori-
gins: Wolverine” from 2009. Mangold and Jackman are
responsible for an intelligent, solid tale that goes beneath
the muscles and mayhem to explore a mutant who is
mighty physically but fragile psychologically.