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Iron Man 2 - Blu-Ray

Iron Man 2 - Blu-Ray

USA 2009 - with Robert Downey jr., Gwyneth Paltrow, Scarlett Johansson, Mickey Rourke ...

Movie info

Original title:Iron Man 2
Genre:Action, Fantasy, Comedy
Direction:Jon Favreau
Sales launch:07.10.2010
Production country:USA 2009
Running time:Approx. 125 min.
Rated:Ages 12+
Number of discs:1
Languages:German, English (DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1)
Subtitles:Deutsch
Picture format:16:9 (2.35:1) 1080p High Definition
Bonus:Making of, 6 featurettes, deleted scenes, music video, design gallery, Animated Storyboards and Stunts (PiP), S.H.I.E.L.D. database, BD Live
Region code:Alle Regionen
Amazon Link : Iron Man 2 - Blu-Ray

Film: Two years after the sensational success of "Iron Man", director Jon Favreau and lead actor Robert Downey Jr. have teamed up once again to send the superhero in steely armor on a second cinematic adventure. With great action, terrific effects and, most importantly, top-notch supporting cast, "Iron Man 2" more than convincingly succeeds in eclipsing its predecessor in nearly every way.

After revealing to the world's public at a press conference that he is Iron Man, Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr.) is caught in more than just the media crossfire. True, it is thanks to Iron Man's intervention that warlike conflicts around the world have drastically decreased. And yet, the superhero has not only made friends. Especially weapons magnate Justin Hammer (Sam Rockwell), who has always been in Tony Stark's shadow, wants to finally make his unloved competitor harmless. He enlists the help of Ivan Vanko aka "Whiplash" (Mickey Rourke), the son of the man who once worked with Tony's father to develop a highly explosive technology that ultimately, Ivan is certain, cost him his life. Now "Whiplash" wants revenge.

But Tony might consider himself lucky if those were the only problems he had to contend with. Because his best friend Rhodey (Don Cheadle) also seems to be turning on the media darling. And to make matters worse, the very technology that makes him Iron Man makes him so sick that Tony has to fear for his life. But the biggest battle is yet to come.

Although "Iron Man 2" may seem a bit overstuffed at first glance with its numerous supporting characters and storylines, Jon Favreau has pulled off a bit of a feat. Every character introduced is well fleshed out and noticeably carries the actual plot forward. Even Happy Hogan, Tony Stark's driver and bodyguard, played by Favreau himself, who only appeared for a few moments in the first installment, makes an important tel in his brief but very watchable appearances here to make the film work so well. Also Samuel L. Jackson, who is seen again as Nick Fury, Gwyneth Paltrow as Pepper Potts, U.S. comedian Garry Shandling as sleazy Senator Stern and finally Scarlett Johansson as mysterious as attractive Natalie Rushman are all far more than just prominently cast extras.

But the good character drawing is particularly intense noticeable in the main characters. But even though Mickey Rourke makes a convincing villain and his "Whiplash" - and especially his first appearance at a Formula 1 race - is certainly one of the highlights of the film, it's Sam Rockwell who steals the show here for everyone (except Robert Downey Jr., of course). Rockwell does a wonderful job of conveying Hammer's desperate attempts to outshine Tony Stark onto the screen with a mixture of cockiness and uptight insecurity. The interactions between Hammer and Stark, due in no small part to the wonderfully written dialogue, are nothing short of superb.

Besides the characters, however, the action du special effects are also fully convincing. If the last act of part 1 still seemed a bit clumsy and the action here threatened to be crushed by its own weight, Favreau manages in the second attempt much better to let it really crash. The finale, which is played out at Stark Industries' big expo, is exciting, amusing and, above all, fast-paced, without visually bludgeoning the viewer too much, as was the case with, say, "Transformers 2".

"Iron Man 2" is the best proof that good actors, clever dialogues, elaborate special effects and explosive action can be combined and are not mutually exclusive. With its great lead actor (no one but Robert Downey Jr. could have embodied Tony Stark's arrogance with such a charming twinkle in his eye), a good script, and a marked increase in the quality and quantity of the action, "Iron Man 2" is a great sequel that leaves you wanting more. Definitely not to be missed!

Picture + Sound: Technically, the Blu-ray is on quite a high level. Even if the picture overall seems a bit dark, it can score with a high overall sharpness, a coherent, slightly alienated color scheme and decent contrasts. The sound really lets it rip in the numerous action sequences, offering great surround effects, but also numerous quiet sequences dominated only by the dialogue. Very good!

Extras: The Blu-Ray has just under 153 minutes of bonus material to offer. 82 minutes of that alone falls to the very extensive four-part making of, which uses interviews and behind-the-scenes footage to delve into various aspects of the production. A very good Making of, which has here and there strong advertising character, but alone due to the length offers a wealth of information, which one looks for in vain in commercial Making ofs.

Further information is then available in six shorter featurettes (a total of just under 30 minutes), which deal with the new characters, the music and the effects, among other things. Eight dropped scenes, including an alternate beginning, a design gallery, the S.H.I.E.L.D. database, which features numerous images and documents as well as some pretty training videos trimmed to look old, and a music video by AC/DC are also on the rich bonus program.

This is then supplemented with a very entertaining, optionally German subtitled audio commentary by director and supporting actor Jon Favreau. If you want to learn more details about the filming of the sequel after the making of and the featurettes, you should definitely listen to this entertaining commentary. And if that's still not enough, there's a picture-in-picture feature during the main movie that allows you to see animated storyboards and clips of the stuntmen's work on some scenes.

Conclusion: "Iron Man 2" is the rare case where the sequel is not only equal to its predecessor, but superior. On the Blu-Ray, the film also thrilled with a very good technical implementation and great, detailed extras. Therefore applies then also: absolutely recommendable!

An article by Frankfurt-Tipp