Aptorian, on 15 April 2010 - 08:06 PM, said:
Abyss, on 15 April 2010 - 03:03 PM, said:
Aptorian, on 15 April 2010 - 06:10 AM, said:
X-men was bad from the start. ....
'Waaaah it wasn't like the comic book' is not a valid criticism of a film.
Oh but it is. There is a difference between "starting over" and "dumbing down" the story. ....
Nope. The difference is between a 2 hour movie that must sell lunchboxes in order to keep its corporate overlords in four hundred dollar leather shoes hand woven by micronesian cybernetic spider monkeys, and a comic book that needs to sell to about 50 thousand people in order to justify its existance. And sell lunchboxes.
XMen has, in theory, years of 20something page installments to build via slow boil to a massive finish (to say nothing of Jean coming back six or seventeen times). Sure, the average comic is 15 minutes of your life, but The Phoenix Saga happened over YEARS. A single year of issues is 180 minutes of read time. The actual creation of the characters and build up to the whole thing goes back through the creation of the X-men, Scott and Jean's ongoing love thing, Wolverine's crush, the whole 'Sentinels in a satellite' thing, the Shi'ar Empire, the Hellfire Club, etc etc etc. Or put another way, over 500 minutes of read time.
Now condense that down to 120 market friendly minutes that will apeal to the masses who don't know who Jason Wyngard is or why he's relevant. You can't and if you triedyou'd either be making a movie for too small a group, OR planning it as part 1 of 12.
Any successful adaptation from hard medium to film has jettisoned most of the background, supporting cast, backstory, etc and focused in on one thing. It's not dumbing down to realize that you can't fit everything and the danger room sink into 2 hours and have it work.
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Think of it like comparing Tim Burtons Batman with Chris Nolans...
You're comparing two movies there. Won't work. Both of those movies broke decades of Batman down into small digestible bits: Dude dresses up in bat-tights, hits people.
Compare either of those movies to, say, THE KILLING JOKE or THE DARK KNIGHT RETURNS, and you've got a workable basis to judge how different mediums approach the same source material.
Which brings us to AVENGERS. In theory, Marvel is counting on a series of movies to establish the main characters and then a bigger event flic to unite them.
Each of the 'origin' movies so far has broken the character down into digestible bits and shown the audience the shiny...
HULK: Whimpy scientist gets mad, turns into Lou Ferrigno, hits stuff.
IRON MAN: Rich guy almost dies, builds supersuit, blows stuff up.
I'm curious to see how they appoach Cap and Thor in the remaining 'source' flics, because the root concepts are a bit more complicated... Cap would work as 'Whimpy soldier gets drugs, turns into hero, hits stuff' and not spend too much time on cryogenic freezing, dead nazis with skin conditions and truth/justice/the american way. If they spend too much time on 'he's a relic from the 40s' they're going to be in trouble. No one seeing this movie was alive in the 40s. Thor... comics to the contrary, 'Hercules' is a concept in the cutural groupthink, but 'Norse god of thunder with a really big hammer', not so much. If they break it down to 'Badass viking has superpowers, hits stuff', it MIGHT work.
And Joss better bring his A-game to tieing it all together or no amount of Samuel Jackson cool will save the movie.