Plot
After his wife falls under the influence of a drug dealer, an everyday guy transforms himself into Crimson Bolt, a superhero with the best intentions, though he lacks for heroic skills.
Release Year: 2010
Rating: 6.8/10 (25,191 voted)
Critic's Score: 50/100
Director:
James Gunn
Stars: Rainn Wilson, Ellen Page, Liv Tyler
Storyline Frank Darbo is a hapless fry cook. When his wife Sarah falls off the wagon and dumps him for Jock, a drug dealer, Frank tries to get her back by reporting her kidnapped, grabbing her from Jock's car, and wailing for her to return. After watching Christian TV and having a vision, he becomes a superhero to fight evil. He sews a costume, finds a weapon (a pipe wrench) and looks for crimes to stop. He has problems: his wrench inflicts real injury, so the cops want him for being a vigilante, his sense of boundaries is flawed, and Jock's gang has guns. Libby, a clerk at a comics store, becomes his sidekick, and it's time to go save Sarah. What chance do they have?
Cast: Rainn Wilson
-
Frank D'Arbo
/
The Crimson Bolt
Ellen Page
-
Libby
/
Boltie
Liv Tyler
-
Sarah
Kevin Bacon
-
Jacques
Gregg Henry
-
Detective John Felkner
Michael Rooker
-
Abe
Andre Royo
-
Hamilton
Sean Gunn
-
Toby
Stephen Blackehart
-
Quill
Don Mac
-
Mr. Range
Linda Cardellini
-
Pet Store Employee
Nathan Fillion
-
The Holy Avenger
William Katt
-
Sgt. Fitzgibbon
Grant Goodman
-
Young Frank
Paul T. Taylor
-
Frank Sr.
Opening Weekend: $46,549
(USA)
(3 April 2011)
(11 Screens)
Gross: $322,157
(USA)
(22 May 2011)
Technical Specs
Runtime:
USA:
Did You Know?
Trivia:
Towards the end of the movie when Liv Tyler is in her rehab group session, she is heard stating "f**ked up, insecure, neurotic, and emotional". This is a reference and nod to her rocker father Steven Tyler (of Aerosmith) and his 1980's song "FINE" which is an acronym for the same line.
Goofs:
Crew or equipment visible:
After getting shot, Frank drives away and the shadow of the camera man is visible on the Crimson Bolt. The sun is on the other side (car has turned around) in the next shot in the car.
Quotes: Frank D'Arbo:
[shouting]
How am I supposed to tell crime to shut up if I have to shut up?
User Review
An awesomely fun and twisted little fantasy
Rating: 9/10
Despite enjoying other films like it, I was never a fan of James Gunn's
Slither. It just came off as being average to me, and despite multiple
tries, I have never ventured back to give it a second chance. Keeping
that in mind, I ventured into a screening of Super at the Toronto
International Film Festival hoping to be surprised, and not to come
away disappointed. Thankfully, it turned out to be quite the awesome
surprise.
Frank D'Arbo (Rainn Wilson) lives a pretty miserable existence. He has
just two happy memories in his entire life – marrying his wife Sarah
(Liv Tyler) and pointing a police officer in the right direction of a
suspect. So when Sarah, a stripper and former junkie, leaves him for
her boss Jacques (Kevin Bacon), he loses all faith. But during a chance
epiphany, he realizes his true calling is to be a superhero – the
Crimson Bolt – and fight against those committing any sort of crime,
whether it be drug dealing, underage rape or even butting in-line at
the movies.
While I figured the film would have a hurdle to face making it feel
different than any other movie about ordinary people donning costumes
and fighting crime (in the past few years alone, see Special, Defendor,
Kick-Ass and to a point, even Batman Begins and The Dark Knight), but
Super is a much different beast. From the epilogue through the totally
ridiculous (in a good way) animated song and dance credit sequence on,
you know you are in for something different. This is a film that
embraces the absurd and the full-blown psychopathic, and delivers a
twistedly hilarious comic gem that lacks the seriousness (mostly) that
plagues the other films previously mentioned. And any movie about
someone using a pipewrench to wreak havoc on crime is immediately
enough to make me forget Defendor even existed.
I think the element that sets Gunn's twisted fantasy apart from other
films is that it is decidedly not mainstream. D'Arbo truly becomes the
superhero we all wish we were by taking out anyone who is committing
crimes. He has the vendetta against Jacques taking his wife hanging
over his head throughout the movie, but in the meantime, he ensures
that no crime goes unpunished – in increasingly graphically violent
ways. I knew that using a pipewrench could only lead to a bloody mess,
but I did not expect the movie to become the nasty bloodbath it quickly
does. If you remember being disappointed at how much blood got cut
between the conversion of Kick-Ass from a comic to a film, you will be
delighted at just how much is spilt here. I knew Gunn was a graduate of
the Troma film academy (Lloyd Kaufman makes a cameo late in the film),
but I never expected to see just as much violence as I did. Thankfully,
every injury and blood spurt is more hilarious and ridiculous than the
last.
Wilson is amazing from start to finish as D'Arbo. I have never been a
fan of his zany humour, but it fits this role perfectly. He jumps from
being the pathetic loser to being the invigorated crime fighter with
ease. And despite playing the role seriously, you never once think he
is descending into parody. The film is a parody, but he never hams it
up in the role deliberately looking for laughs. He has a very strong
comic presence that he maintains throughout the film, and brings a
rather poignant touch to more than a few scenes. If he sticks to more
roles like these, and stays away from being the best thing in downright
awful movies like The Rocker and My Super Ex-Girlfriend, he might have
quite the career ahead of him.
The supporting cast is all very good and very funny in their smaller
roles. Bacon is just as good as he always is, injecting the right
amount of style and finesse into his scumbag of a character. Tyler
could have done a bit more as the damsel in distress, but she remains
quite memorable in her role. Smaller turns by Gregg Henry, Michael
Rooker and especially Nathan Fillion all pay off wonderfully within the
film. But if anyone can even stand close to Wilson's performance, it is
Ellen Page as the off-the-rails comic nerd Libby. While she has found
fame playing Juno and derivatives of the same character in the majority
of her roles, she actually is quite different here. She alternates
between being anxiety-ridden and being a complete psychopath, often in
the same scene, and practically steals the film from Wilson. And when
she finally becomes his sidekick Boltie, she truly is able to embrace
the absurd.
If I have any problem with the film (outside of a rather bizarre and
horrendous looking CGI sequence early in the film), it is that it never
stays consistent with its tones. The humour remains intact throughout,
but its absurdity starts to waver as the film goes on. It remains
ridiculous, but it becomes a bit too serious in some sections. It feels
more like Gunn did not want to truly push the film into the realm of
comic fantasy, and still wanted some semblance of realism to stay
within the film. He explained his tonal shift choices to the audience,
but it still is not enough to make up for the film never knowing which
way it wants to go. I loved its unpredictability of what D'Arbo would
do next, but loathed never knowing what the next shift would be. It
never destroys the film, but it weakens the film cohesively.
Super is an awesome film, and one whose dark humour never truly
overtakes it. Wilson and Page are amazing in their roles, and the rest
of the supporting cast does a great job backing them up. I just hope
everyone can experience and have as much fun as I did.
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