With the ledgers closed and audiences back to fall pursuits, the past four months can clearly be called the Summer of the Sequel. Of the ten highest-grossing films released between May and August, seven were based on previous hits.
However, beyond a clear case of déjà vu, these top performers had something else in common: each demonstrated the importance of irony to a motion picture premise.
Irony is that 180-degree twist that presents the hero with his/her ultimate challenge and infuses the narrative with a critical sense of unpredictability. It can be found at the heart of virtually every successful film from D.W. Griffith to Judd Apatow, from the most lowbrow studio comedy to the loftiest indie drama. Sometimes it’s overt (“Of all the gin joints in all the towns in all the world, she walks into mine.” Casablanca, 1942). Sometimes it’s more subtle, as with Terrence Malick’s 2011 The Tree of Life, where the seemingly trivial moments of everyday life are juxtaposed against the awe-inspiring forces of space and time that brought the characters to a particular moment.
Certainly the films at the top of the all-time moneymakers’ list* contain the essential element of irony. For example:
CAPTAIN AMERICA: THE FIRST AVENGER Domestic Gross $150 million The irony in this film all but writes the first act by itself: A ninety-eight-pound weakling considered unfit for military service is enlisted in a top-secret military project to be transformed into America’s ultimate super-solider. The man who can’t even qualify as a private, is bully fodder and a social misfit not only single-handedly wins WWII, he also beats up the bully and gets the girl. Oh, just to keep things consistent, the movie’s a prequel! |
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As these films attest, just because a movie is a sequel or prequel doesn’t mean it can’t contain the same ironies that helped drive its original. Sometimes this means taking the hero back to square one. Sometimes it means shifting the focus to another character. And sometimes it means doing the original movie all over again and simply changing the scene slugs.Yeah, I’m looking at you, Hangover Part II.
* Source: Box Office Mojo www.boxofficemojo.com accessed 8/16/11 |