Tough Guy Babysits…Again: Playing with Fire
'Playing with Fire' was clearly a film made for a kid or tween-ish audience. Keeping that in mind, I thought 'Playing with Fire' was alright, though it did portray some harmful stereotypes.
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Unknown Origins is a Spanish murder mystery about people getting killed in specific ways — they imitate the origins of famous superheroes.
At first, the movie starts out promising. The deaths are gruesome; one victim has his heart removed and dies in a suit of armor, imitating Iron Man. This seems to show that the film means business. This is going to be a mature and dark film.
Nope.
While the film still carries other dark elements, it unceremoniously spirals into cringy comedy. The problem mainly lies in one of the characters. We follow a cop named David (Javier Rey) and a comic book store owner named Jorge (Brays Efe). Jorge joins the investigation due to his knowledge on superheroes and partners up with David.
The relationship is your standard cold cop who’s reluctant to have a partner because they’re annoying — and Jorge is annoying and takes away the serious tone that the movie once had. Jorge is your stereotypical geek who wears geeky clothes all the time — he even wears a Star Wars shirt to a funeral. I swore I was watching The Big Bang Theory whenever he appeared. He also spurts out references at any chance he has. At first it’s amusing, but becomes old really fast.
Look, there’s nothing wrong with being a geek (I’m fairly geeky myself), but if they wanted this film to be gritty, they needed to tone down the fanservice and focus more on the investigation. Heck, the film halts several times for Jorge to give David lectures on how being a geek doesn’t make you a loser.
What’s weird is the movie makes the impression that comics are under appreciated, which is ironic considering that the the second highest grossing film ever is Avengers: Endgame, only second to Avatar in box office success. Perhaps if this movie came out years ago, it would’ve made more sense, but given that fantasy/sci-fi franchises have become so mainstream in the past several years, this films ethos leaves a lot of room for criticism.
In Madrid, Spain, a mysterious serial killer ruthlessly murders his victims by recreating the first appearance of several comic book superheroes. Cosme, a veteran police inspector who is about to retire, works on the case along with the tormented inspector David Valentín and his own son Jorge Elías, a nerdy young man who owns a comic book store.
'Playing with Fire' was clearly a film made for a kid or tween-ish audience. Keeping that in mind, I thought 'Playing with Fire' was alright, though it did portray some harmful stereotypes.
He’s a nine-time Oscar host and a revered comedy legend. He’s an up-and-coming comedy star who was a voice in the biggest animated movie of all time. So what happens when these two are forced to work together?
The original series is now on Netflix, you should definitely give it a watch. And if you’ve already seen it, watch it again.