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Green Lantern: First Flight comes from producer Bruce Timm who had hits with various animated tv series based on DC properties such as Batman (1992-5), Superman (1996-2000), Batman Beyond/Batman of the Future (1999-2001) and Justice League/Justice League Unlimited (2001-5). The Batman and Superman series both led to a series of film spinoffs. Green Lantern: First Light comes as part of a series of quality animated films taken from DC properties that Timm oversaw in the late 00s under the umbrella title of DC Universe Original Animated Movies. These also included Superman: Doomsday (2007), Batman: Gotham Knight (2008), Justice League: The New Frontier (2008), Superman/Batman: Public Enemies (2009), Wonder Woman (2009), Batman: Under the Red Hood (2010), Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths (2010), Superman/Batman: Apocalypse (2010), All-Star Superman (2011), Batman: Year One (2011) and Justice League: Doom (2012). With Green Lantern: First Light, Bruce Timm has handed direction over to Lauren Montgomery, a former storyboard artist on several of his shows before becoming co-director with Superman: Doomsday and then going solo with Wonder Woman. Green Lantern has certainly been less popular a character in screen incarnations than other DC superheroes like Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman and The Flash even Aquaman has had more screen time. Green Lantern had made occasional appearances on shows like The Superman/Aquaman Hour of Adventure (1967) and Super Friends (1973-86). He also made a live-action appearance in the tv pilot Justice League of America (1997) played by Matthew Settle, although that was oddly the Guy Gardner characterization of Green Lantern, Abin Surs supposed backup choice who became an unstable character in subsequent comic-book appearances. Green Lantern did appear as a regular on Bruce Timms Justice League tv series, although there Timm and co went with the John Stewart incarnation as opposed to Hal Jordan in order to add racial diversity to the line-up. The origin story of Green Lantern also appeared in Justice League: The New Frontier but that was the Hal Jordan version and the era of the storys telling was backdated to the late 1950s when Hal Jordan first appeared. The Hal Jordan Green Lantern also appears here, while the Green Lantern origin story is briefly recapped however this version is set contemporary. This does lead to the oddity of three different appearances of Green Lantern in the Bruce Timm universe, all of which contradict the other. Just after Green Lantern: First Flight came out, there was also the announcement of the live-action movie Green Lantern (2011) directed by Martin Campbell and starring Ryan Reynolds as Hal Jordan. Green Lantern: First Flight works well on screen. One has seen enough of the Bruce Timm films by now to know that, though liberties and continuity changes will be conducted, his films and series are always the most faithful of any screen works in regard to respecting the original DC comic-book sources. We get all the familiar aspects of the Green Lantern canon the far-too-obviously named Sinestro with his pencil-thin mustache (who was apparently originally modelled on actor David Niven) and his emergence as the Yellow Lantern; appearances of other members of the Green Lantern Corps such as Kilowog, Boodika, Arisia Rrab and the chipmunk-like Chp; as well as appearances from the Weaponers of Qward and Kanjar Ro, a super-villain who has turned up in various DC stories. The only complaint might be the depiction of the Guardians of Oa who seem petulant and squabbling as opposed to magisterial and infinitely wise but then one supposes if the film went with the original comic-book depiction, we would have a bunch of blue-skinned Yoda clones. One of the problems I have always had with a superhero like Green Lantern is that when you have a character who is capable of manifesting anything by thinking about or protecting himself from most damage by whipping up a shield, it makes him so powerful that it limits dramatic potential. Like Superman, writers have to keep dreaming up more-gigantic-than-lifesize menaces to give their heroes an evenly balanced challenge, or creating flaws (Kryptonite, the colour yellow) so as to not make the characters too invulnerable. This is the problem in Green Lantern: First Flight but Lauren Montgomery compensates firstly by dazzling one with the action sequences and secondly with a decided sense of humour. All of Bruce Timms series and films are worth watching for their superheroic action sequences alone. Nobody manages to scale them with the feeling of amazement and powerfulness as Timm and associates do. There are some fabulous action sequences here with the Green Lanterns pursuing Kanjar Ros escaping ship into combat down a hyperspace tunnel or the crashing of a ship at the spaceport. It is during these scenes that Hal Jordan emerges with real heroic strength as a character. The film reaches its peak with a fabulous climax as Sinestro battles the Green Lanterns en masse and turns the Yellow Lantern on Oa in a swathe of mass destruction, before Hal Jordan rises up as a super-empowered Green Lantern after touching the Green Element and blasts Sinestro through entire buildings and mountains, before battling up into orbit and dragging two moons to collide together to crush the Yellow Lantern. When it comes to humour, one of the more amusing aspects is watching the various items that Hal Jordan keeps producing from the ring a ladder to batter Kuch like some WWF cage match; giant boots to stomp opponents; a gigantic golf club to swat the Yellow Lantern into outer space. At one point, a bored Hal is shown doing yoyo tricks with his ring. At another point, he is asked what he is doing as he tackles several aliens, Just a little pest control problem, he replies and manifests a giant-sized fly swat to squelch his opponents against the wall. The only quibbles that one might make would perhaps be the storys hurry to get to the main action. Hal Jordan becomes conversant with his ring almost overnight there are no scenes of him trying it out or training in its powers. There is also a lack of any amazement, surprise or culture shock on his part at being thrown into an intergalactic society he appears to become conversant with this in no time with there being only a single throwaway line about the rings library of intergalactic information. The early scenes chasing down Kuch in the intergalactic bar are disappointingly routine as Lauren Montgomery shows too obvious a debt of inspiration to the cantina scene from Star Wars (1977). Christopher Meloni does well as Hal Jordan, giving the character just the right balance of brash cockiness and eventual heroic strength. Victor Garber, best known as Jennifer Garners father on tvs Alias (2001-6), makes a fine Sinestro, with Garbers tightly clipped pronunciation being just right for the part.
Bruce Timm and Lauren Montgomery have announced a further Green Lantern film with Green Lantern: Emerald Knights (2011), as well as an upcoming tv series Green Lantern: The Animated Series (2011 ).
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