Before the creation of the MCU by Disney, there were not a lot of comic book films that were coming out or at least that were treated seriously by the box office. In the 1990's, various film studios started to take chances on random comic book titles that faithfuls would know like Tank Girl, Judge Dredd, Barb Wire, The Crow, and today's film The Rocketeer which was released in 1991 by Disney and directed by Joe Johnston (Captain America: The First Avenger). The film stars Billy Campbell (Bram Stoker's Dracula) as airplane pilot Cliff in pre-World War II 1938 Los Angeles who just wants to fly a plane in Nationals and marry his girl Jenny (Jennifer Connelly), but an accident with one of the planes sets him back. One day, Billy stumbles on to a prototype of a jet pack that allows him to become a hero, but there are some very bad people after this jet pack. The film also stars Alan Arkin (Little Miss Sunshine) as Peevy, Timothy Dalton (License To Kill) as Neville Sinclair, Paul Sorvino (Goodfellas) as Eddie Valentine, Terry O'Quinn (Primal Fear) as Howard Hughes, Ed Lauter (King Kong) as Fitch, Jon Polito (The Crow) as Bigelow, Tiny Ron (Last Man Standing) as Lothar, and Eddie Jones (Sneakers) as Malcolm.
When I saw that Joe Johnston directed this film, it made a lot of sense to me because it had the same feel and aesthetic as Captain America: First Avenger. It's almost an updated version of The Rocketeer, but this film was actually pretty good that was actually an enjoyable film from beginning to end. The only thing that I would criticize is that Lothar just looked like he was wearing a mask the whole entire film much like the look of Dick Tracy (the film). I thought that Timothy Dalton was actually a really good villain and it makes perfect sense because he's a great actor, but he is a good opposite of what Billy is. Billy is a grease monkey pilot who is blue collar in love with a girl that is out of this world and just happens to be an actress which is what Dalton's character is. It was definitely the perfect set up for a great show down at the end of the film inside of a Zeppelin. I thought the gangsters int he film were a little cheesy, but they actually matched the times and what we thought of how Gangsters were in those Cagney times so it's safe to say that I loved it. All I could think of was Cagney and him saying, "Yeah! tell him the Valentine Gang did it!" The one thing that I absolutely did love about this film was the sets that were used like the Bull Dog Cafe which is so cool looking and in fact Disney has a replica of it in a museum. This isn't the greatest superhero movie ever made because I think that still belongs to The Dark Knight, but this was fun and it's all thanks to DC and Batman 1989 being so popular. I am going to give the film an B- for a final grade.
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