Movie Title: Iron Man 2 (2010)
Spoilers: none
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2008's Iron Man was to some an enigma, a movie  that did better at  the box office than some would say it should have.  And the film's well  deserved success didn't have much to do with the  fact that every  character played a vital role that was succinctly and  pleasingly  identifiable as protagonist or antagonist, nor with the fact  that the  movie was never, ever boring or self-absorbed. Why then did  the first  Iron Man prove to be such a sensation?
We have  essentially three reasons: a. The man behind the (literal) mask -   Tony Stark - made sense as a man of principle, as well as compassion.   Tony Stark was not only brilliant, but also thoughtful, a Robin Hood of   sorts. b. He had (has) resources, which is an inspiration to  all humans  because that is something attainable by way of power, as  opposed to  Superman or Silver Surfer who both possess cosmic powers.  And those  points lead to reason c. the comics are then made  believable in that  they feel less like comics and more like a reality  where a bold figure  puts his money in the right place and makes the  right changes. Iron Man  is much like Batman. His toys are just  different. 
Iron Man 2 takes us back to within a few  months of the conclusion  of the first film. Anton Vanko, a dejected  Russian physicist who once  worked with Tony Stark's father, is sinking  into the abyss of death.  Feeling wronged by the Stark family, the fires  of revenge have been  fueled. Another will carry the torch. Ivan Vanko  (Mickey Rourke) - his  son and himself a physicist, "Whiplash" - is  ready to carry on as a technologically  competent and hungry extractor  of revenge (you knew this was going to  involve revenge sooner or  later). 
Meanwhile, Iron Man has cleaned up the world stage. He  has taken off in  popularity like he has in his flying suit. There is  relative peace, all  because of Iron Man, who is even more of a proud,  charismatically  endowed peacock than he sported himself as in part one.  But all is not  well due to his damaged arc reactor, which leads to  Palladium poisoning  that is slowly killing him. 
There appears  to be no competition in the world for Iron Man. Stark's  technology is  leading—so much so that by it we see the introduction of  the next tier  of the multi-tiered plot: the government wants Stark to  hand over his  suit and its technology. Senator Stern (Gary Shandling) is  the leading  voice behind the move to take the Iron Man suit by force in  the  interests of national security. Stark's personal assurances that  his  work will remain top-notch and used only in the best interests of  the  country will not be enough. 
The doubters are right to have  their doubts. Stark soon finds himself up  against Vanko, the  at-first-under-funded-but-still-powerful enemy with a  philosophically  charged and predator-appealing point of view: “If you  could make God  bleed, the world would cease to believe in him.” That  will be  considered one of the cooler villain lines in movies in years to  come.  How will Iron Man's popularity fare if a genius physicist  newcomer  steps up to the plate and makes him "bleed" helplessly before  an  on-looking world of former admirers?
As with Iron Man I, film  time is without slack and well utilized. There  are no long or airy  pauses for dramatic effect between expressions or  lines, no stagnant  scenes that need to be cut. The expected drop-offs  for comic relief  come at exactly the right times. 
Lt. Colonel James Rhodes (Don  Cheadle) has now a more significant role  than just Stark's close  friend and representative of the military. He is  in on the action, but  finds himself torn between his allegiance to the  U.S government and his  friendship with Stark. Samuel L. Jackson is Nick  Fury of the Avengers,  who has but a small part allotted to him. His was, however, a  smart  write-in. The role is significant and hints at more sequels and  gives  other comic movies ways to unite in direction with this one. And  it's  always nice to see Samuel L. Jackson's involvement in a movie that does   not suck. 
Iron Man II stands behind Iron Man I in terms  of quality for one reason  only: there is no sufficient resolution to  the biggest conflict  component of the story. What is stopping the  government from stripping  Iron Man of his power? A city succumbing to  explosions because of fighting, out-of-control  droids and enhancement  suits equipped with secret technology is a symptom of the  problem of  not keeping power in check. Being the hero who stops disaster  will not  be a long-term solution. Disasters of this kind would only  expedite  Uncle Sam's measures to get the potentially deadly technology  out of  private hands. Competition must always be presumed a threat in  the  struggle for national survival. 
The character of Vanko was  sufficiently (but not memorably) written. We  never get to see the  character's full potential. If the same  "heart-and-soul" had been put  into his construction as some of the other  characters, all would have  benefited. The fascinating progress of the  story that scoots by 112  minutes like nothing makes up for most of that,  more so at the  beginning than at the ending. Part II may not be quite  as slick as its  predecessor, but I am not one to split hairs. 
(JH)
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Grade: A- (4 stars) Recommended! 
Rated: PG-13 (for sequences of intense sci-fi action and violence, and some language)
Director: Jon Favreau
Summary: Billionaire Tony Stark must contend with deadly issues involving the government, his own friends, as well as new enemies due to his superhero alter ego Iron Man.
Starring: Robert Downey Jr. "Tony Stark," Don Cheadle "Lt. Col. James 'Rhodey' Rhodes," Scarlett Johansson "Natalie Rushman / Natasha Romanoff," Gwyneth Paltrow "Pepper Potts," Sam Rockwell "Justin Hammer," Mickey Rourke "Ivan Vanko," Samuel L. Jackson "Nick Fury"
Genre: Action / Adventure / Sci-Fi / Thriller
Trailer
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