Mystery Men

Mystery Men
Mystery Men
Directed by Kinka Usher
Produced by Lawrence Gordon
Lloyd Levin
Mike Richardson
Written by Comic book series:
Bob Burden
Screenplay:
Neil Cuthbert
Starring Ben Stiller
Hank Azaria
William H. Macy
Janeane Garofalo
Eddie Izzard
Greg Kinnear
Kel Mitchell
Paul Reubens
Geoffrey Rush
Claire Forlani
Lena Olin
Wes Studi
Tom Waits
Music by Stephen Warbeck
Cinematography Stephen H. Burum
Editing by Conrad Buff
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date(s) July 30, 1999
Running time 121 minutes
Country USA
Language English
Budget $68,000,000
Box office $33,461,011

Mystery Men is a 1999 comedy film based on a Dark Horse comic book series feature in Flaming Carrot Comics by Bob Burden, directed by TV commercial director Kinka Usher. It stars William H. Macy, Ben Stiller, and Hank Azaria as a trio of lesser superheroes with fairly unimpressive superpowers who are required to save the day. The film's two great strengths are considered to be the art direction and the dialogue, much of which was improvised by the cast. Despite its list of stars and the critical praise, Mystery Men was widely considered to be a flop with a final box office gross of just $29,762,011 domestically and $3,699,000 outside the USA.[1]

It has since built a cult following.[2]

Contents

Plot

In the fictional metropolis of Champion City, three men (Mr. Furious, The Shoveler, and the Blue Raja) attempt to make a name for themselves as superheroes, but find themselves upstaged by the well-sponsored Captain Amazing. However, Amazing is finding that his skill at capturing villains has left the city with virtually no crime, and his sponsors are threatening to end their deals. In order to create a need for a superhero, Amazing uses his alter ego, the billionaire lawyer Lance Hunt, to argue for the release of the insane supervillain Casanova Frankenstein. The plan backfires; once reunited with Tony P and his Disco Boys, Frankenstein blows up the insane asylum, captures Amazing, and sets his sights on creating a doomsday device: the "Psycho-frakulator" which can bend reality. Mr. Furious, while spying on Frankenstein's mansion, discovers Amazing's abduction, and tells the others.

The three realize they need more allies, and through word-of-mouth and try-outs, they bring aboard The Spleen, Invisible Boy, and the Bowler. The newly formed team "assaults" Casanova, which only succeeds in annoying him and damaging his car. While celebrating their victory, Tony P and his Disco Boys nearly kill them, but they are saved by the Sphinx. The Sphinx begins to train them, annoying Mr. Furious with his methods. The also recruit mad scientist Dr. Heller who specializes in non-lethal weaponry.

The group breaks into Casanova's mansion in an attempt to save Captain Amazing, while Casanova gathers the various gangs of the city. In their attempts to free him, they inadvertently kill Amazing. Without Amazing, the team believes there is no way they can save the city. The Shoveler convinces everyone that it's their time and to say goodbye to their loved ones. Mr. Furious, feeling that both his position of authority and his apparent lack of powers are in question, finds solace in talking with Monica, a diner waitress, who tells him to just be himself. Mr. Furious rejoins the team, and they assault the mansion, subduing most of the henchmen with their weapons and using their negligible powers to surprisingly good effect. Unfortunately, as the heroes approach Frankenstein, he reveals that he has kidnapped Monica, then proceeds to activate the Psycho-frakulator and wreak havoc upon the city. As the team figures out how to stop the device, Mr. Furious takes on Frankenstein. After being taunted by and taking a beating from Frankenstein, Mr. Furious unleashes his inner rage and actually manages to fight effectively. He defeats Frankenstein, who is thrown into the core of the Psycho-frakulator and killed by its reality-bending powers. The rest of the team helps the Bowler use her bowling ball to destroy the Psycho-frakulator. They escape the mansion as the device implodes.

As the film closes, the team is interviewed by reporters, begging to know what their team name is. As they argue amongst themselves, one reporter states "Well, whoever they are, champion city owes a great debt of gratitude to these 'Mystery Men'", but the others are too busy arguing to hear it.

Cast and characters

The Heroes

Ben Stiller as Mr. Furious. Mr. Furious' claimed power is super-strength, activated only when he becomes incredibly angry; however, this claim is only verified by an unsubstantiated report of him having once lifted a city bus (later described by Mr. Furious as "more of a push", aided by the bus driver who "kind of had his foot on the gas, just in the beginning"), and his final defeat of Casanova Frankenstein at the end of the film. His real name is Roy, and he works at a junk yard, which is where the team prepare the Herkimer Battle Jitney.

William H. Macy as The Shoveler. His real name is Eddie. His special ability is his finesse in using a shovel in a broad variety of ways. His choice of lifestyle causes consternation with his wife, Lucille (Jenifer Lewis) and children.

Hank Azaria as The Blue Raja. His real name is Jeffrey. The blue Raja has the ability to throw any silverware accurately as a tool or weapon, but refuses to throw knives, claiming that "you can't try and stop a crime by committing an even worse one." Though he speaks in a British accent during missions, he is actually a middle-aged American adult that still lives with his mother, Violet (Louise Lasser), and attempts to keep his superhero persona secret from her. His initial costume does not have any blue in it. Besides his costume, another running gag is his puns usually refer to forks (ex: I say, what the fork.)

Kel Mitchell as Invisible Boy. Invisible Boy can become invisible, but only when no one (including himself) is looking. This later proves useful, as gun turrets with motion sensors do not fire on invisible people. However, when his power is used, his clothes fall off (meaning it's more along the lines of becoming intangible.) When he becomes visible again, he's naked.

Paul Reubens as The Spleen. Cursed by a gypsy after he blamed the passing gas on her while walking along with a group of friends, The Spleen can aim his super-powered flatulence to take out his targets, but smells bad at all times. Talks with a lisp and has warts on his face. He has a crush on "The Bowler".

Janeane Garofalo as The Bowler. Her real name is Carol. She is actually the daughter of the original Carmine the Bowler, seeking revenge on Tony P (Eddie Izzard) for the murder of her father (who in the report claimed "died when he fell down an elevator shaft, onto some bullets"). She has had her father's skull embedded into the center of a bowling ball. She appears to communicate with the spirit of her father, which inhabits the ball, allowing it to fly when thrown by his daughter. It also leads to awkward arguments between the two while the rest of the team can only watch her shout.

Wes Studi as The Sphinx. One of the world's most respected superheroes, the Sphinx is "terribly mysterious", and has the power to cut guns in half with his mind. He offers the rest of the team advice, though most of it comes as predictable ("Until you learn to master your rage, your rage will become your master.") and labored, often nonsensical antimetabole ("When you learn to balance a tack hammer on your head, you will head off your foes with a balanced attack.").

Villains

Geoffrey Rush as Casanova Frankenstein. An evil genius and longtime rival of Captain Amazing. While incarcerated in an insane asylum following his initial defeat by Amazing, he learned the mechanics of a reality-bending device known as a "Psycho-frakulator," which he constructs upon his release and uses to attack Champion City. He is the film's main antagonist

Eddie Izzard as Tony P. Frankenstein's second-in-command. Leader of the Disco Boys, he refuses to accept that the disco era came to an end: "Disco is NOT dead, disco is LIFE!" He is armed with a can of highly flammable hairspray that he uses to attack his enemies as well as a heavily modified Taurus PT92 pistol. He is responsible for killing The Bowler's father by "making him fall down an elevator shaft, onto some bullets."

Prakazrel Michel as Tony C. Tony P's second-in-command of the Disco Boys.

Artie Lange as Big Red. Leader of the Red-Eyes, whom Blue Raja, The Shoveler, and Mr. Furious attempt to defeat in the beginning.

Others

Greg Kinnear as Captain Amazing/Lance Hunt. A legendary superhero who has kept Champion City safe for years, and whose suit displays a number of logos of corporate sponsors. He is disliked by the Mystery Men because he constantly shows them up. Captain Amazing is the alter ego of billionaire lawyer Lance Hunt. Lance Hunt's sole physical difference from Captain Amazing is a pair of glasses. That leads Mr. Furious at one point to guess Amazing's true identity, but he is dismissed by his comrades: "He takes them off when he transforms." "That doesn't make any sense, he wouldn't be able to see!"

Ricky Jay as Victor Weems, Captain Amazing's publicist, who manages all of his endorsements that keep the Captain famous and initially inspires him to challenge Frankenstein once more.

Tom Waits as Dr. A. Heller. Dr. Heller is a scientist who designs weapons such as the "blame thrower" and the "shrinker". The Mystery Men almost dismiss him as a lunatic when he tells them that his weapons are strictly non-lethal, until he demonstrates a "canned tornado" on the Spleen. He frequents Champion City nursing homes, "for the ladies." He is rather eccentric, but aids the Mystery Men by providing them with weapons and outfitting their Herkimer Battle Jitney with a large magnet.

Claire Forlani as Monica, the waitress at the diner where the original team of three eat. Though she initially passes on Mr. Furious' attempts to flirt with her, she warms up to him. Unfortunately she tells him to "be himself", while implying that this means not being Mr Furious. This temporarily removes his anger and leaves him less effective in battle.

Cameos during the superhero tryout scene include Dane Cook as The Waffler, Doug Jones as Pencil Head, and Dana Gould as Squeegee Man. Cameos at Casanova's mansion include two frat boys played by action director Michael Bay (he is the one who asks "Can we bring the brewskies?"), and Riki Rachtman, former host of MTV's Headbanger's Ball. Goodie Mob appears as the "Not-So-Goodie-Mob". Cee Lo Green can also be seen playing one of the evil gangsters.

Basis

The movie was loosely based on the independent comic book series Flaming Carrot Comics by Bob Burden, who also gets Writers Guild of America writing credits, though some characters were greatly changed from the original material. The Flaming Carrot was a member of the team and with the exception of Captain Amazing and Invisible Boy, all the heroes from the film appeared at least once as members (though there were many others as well – the team in the comics had a high casualty rate). Casanova Frankenstein also once battled The Flaming Carrot.

Soundtrack

Reception

The film received mixed to positive reviews from critics. Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a score of 60% based on 101 reviews.[3] Jonathan Romney said that it was "a desperately hit-and-miss affair".[citation needed] Michael Dequina said that it "fails to come up with worthy gags and one-liners for the able cast".[citation needed] Steve Murray gave it a negative review, saying "Mystery Men is like its hapless heroes. It's a wannabe that has the best intentions – including a pronounced anti-gun stance – but none of the knack it takes to save the day, or itself."[citation needed]

British television channel Film4 gave it a positive review, saying it was "Hugely entertaining – especially for those with a thing for superheroes."[citation needed] Nell Minow said it was a "Decent depiction of post-modern comic-book story."[citation needed] Rob Gonsalves said it was "An instant cult comedy that doesn't walk or talk like anything else out there."[citation needed]

See also

References

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Mystery Men — Título Mystery Men Ficha técnica Dirección Kinka Usher Producción Lawrence Gordon Guion …   Wikipedia Español

  • Mystery Men — est une comédie américaine basée sur la série de comics de Bob Burden éditée chez Dark Horse Comics. Le film réalisé par Kinka Usher est sorti en 1999. Sommaire 1 Synopsis 2 Fiche technique 3 Distribution …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Mystery Men — Filmdaten Deutscher Titel Mystery Men Produktionsland USA …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Mystery airship — Mystery airships or phantom airships are a class of unidentified flying objects best known from a series of newspaper reports originating in the western United States and spreading east during 1896 and 1897.[1] According to researcher Jerome… …   Wikipedia

  • Mystery film — is a sub genre of the more general category of crime film and at times the thriller genre. It focuses on the efforts of the detective, private investigator or amateur sleuth to solve the mysterious circumstances of a crime by means of clues,… …   Wikipedia

  • Mystery Train (film) — Mystery Train …   Wikipedia

  • Mystery Train — Título Mystery Train Ficha técnica Dirección Jim Jarmusch Producción Rudd Simmons Jim Stark G …   Wikipedia Español

  • Mystery (pickup artist) — Mystery Born Erik James Horvat Markovic September 24, 1971 (1971 09 24) (age 40) Canada Nationality Can …   Wikipedia

  • Mystery of the River Boat — Directed by Lewis D. Collins Ray Taylor Produced by …   Wikipedia

  • Mystery Date (game) — Mystery Date, 1965. Mystery Date is a 1965 board game from the Milton Bradley Company, designed by Marvin Glass. It was marketed to girls 6 to 14 years of age, and was reissued in 1970, 1999, and in 2005. Gameplay Mystery Date can be played with… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”