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If you love movies with lots of high-speed car chases, martial arts fights, gun battles and big explosions, you're a fan of action movies. This genre includes superhero movies like the Batman and X-Men movies, spy movies like the James Bond and Mission Impossible movies, martial arts movies like Japanese samurai films and Chinese kung fu movies, and action-packed thrillers like the Fast and Furious films and the Mad Max movies. The most successful action movies are usually from major Hollywood studios like Universal Pictures, 20th Century Fox and Sony Pictures. These are the movies with the biggest budgets, the most famous actors, the most expensive special effects and the most spectacular action scenes. Millions of action movie fans all over the world flock to see them as soon as they're released.
Picture top right: Movie poster for Pusher, a 2012 US remake of Nicolas Winding Refn's original Danish crime thriller of the same name. (Vertogofilms - )
To create these special effects and spectacular action scenes, directors use computer-generated images, or CGI. When we see a superhero like Spider-Man swinging from building to building, or we see an entire city collapsing and burning, we're probably watching scenes created with CGI. Before the invention of CGI, directors had to film real explosions and fires created by experts in pyrotechnics, and they had to use specially-trained actors to perform dangerous stunts like jumping from moving trains and falling off speeding motorbikes. While these older techniques are sometimes still used, most of the special effects and stunts we see nowadays are created with CGI.
Action movies are usually about a conflict between a hero or a group of heroes and one or more villains. In the Batman movies, for example, Batman's the hero and he's always in conflict with a criminal who's the villain. We see them trying to defeat one another in exciting action scenes, but we also see other scenes that build up to and follow on from these scenes. Movies like these almost always reach a climax near the end in which the hero and the villain meet for a final battle. This climax usually includes some of the movie's most spectacular scenes and special effects.
Since the invention of CGI, more and more action films have been based on comic-book superheroes like Superman, Batman and The X-Men. Before CGI, directors found it difficult to create realistic scenes of superheroes using their superhuman powers, but with CGI they can make it look like Superman really is flying between buildings and crashing through walls. Big-budget action movies like these are often followed by a sequel in which the same hero faces new enemies, or faces an archenemy they've been in conflict with for a long time. If a movie has many sequels, they form a series like the X-Men series.
Not all action movies feature heroes and villains. Some feature anti-heroes like Rambo and Mad Max who face terrible dangers and will do whatever they have to do to survive. Anti-heroes don't have all the good qualities of a hero like James Bond, but we still enjoy watching them face these dangers and battle against others who are also trying to survive. Most action movie fans don't care if the main character is a hero or an anti-hero. If the story is good, the special effects are amazing and the action scenes are exciting, fans will leave the cinema satisfied.
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