WeaselSlayer wrote:I hope this puts the comic book movie fad to bed for a while. I feel like now any comic book movie will immediately be overshadowed by this one. Bottom line is: the guy who did Daredevil (one of my favorite characters) also wrote Grumpier Old Men. And now he's going to do Ghostrider (another one of my favorites). Fuck that guy, seriously. And fuck the Fantastic Four. In general. I always rooted for Doom.
No shit, my friend. Sadly, Hollywood is now terminally obsessed with the notion of the franchise...
A halfway original idea that hits it big can spawn a dozen big-budget flops before they realize they have to move on, like fucking locusts.
jb wrote:
But Rodriguez really needs to learn how to get natural (even though stylized, yes I know thankyouverymuch) performances out of actors.
100% agree. Just because it's stylized doens't mean it has to be over the top so much, and just because it's over the top doesn't mean it has to be poorly acted. Several times, the too-cheezy delivery threw me out of the world of Sin City and back into the movie theater.
Rourke was one of the better ones, but Benicio del Toro was definitely the best.
I believe that turning comics into movies can work but it has to be done well and you have to pick the right source material. It can't just be a star vehicle like Elektra.
PS- F4 is going to be horrible because the books are horrible. I have no idea how F4 has survived so long. Is there an F4 reader or former reader that can explain their appeal. I can only remember one time I was even remotely interested in the books and that was when Tattletale came around but then they went overboard and had Tattletale destroy the whole world.
In all honesty, I don't think I have yet to see a film (superhero) comic book adaptation that got it right. Some have come close. There's always something to spoil it. But then again, there's no reason to assume that it's a genre that lends itself to that conversion ...
I mean, how badly, did I want 'Mystery Men' to be good? And Fantastic four looks (from the few shots that have made it over here) to be not much better than CA.
Don't get me wrong, Bill, I enjoyed it, but it wasn't the comic, and you know, that's kind of how I feel about all comic adaptions. I guess my point was (now I think about it) that there's no reason they shoulkd be, but there's always going to be that disapointment for a comic book nerd like me ....
(for reference, i got really excited reading Doom Patrol #11 yesterday. I suddenly got caught up in it, and it isn't even that good ... )
The Crow is a great movie until you know someone who thinks it is the GREATEST movie, no tongue in no cheek greatest movie ever. Then it is not so fun.
I saw this two nights ago, and as far as making a movie feel like a comic, they did a wonderful job in my opinion. I've not read any of the comics... when I was into comics, my personality was a little less on the dark side, and more into Marvel, particularly x-men. Which scene specifically was Tarantino's? I quite enjoyed Miho.
Even on the <a href="http://poemtastic.com">internet</a> I can't make friends.
Dan Wrekenhaus 2 wrote:when I was into comics, my personality was a little less on the dark side, and more into Marvel, particularly x-men. Which scene specifically was Tarantino's?
Tarantino's scene was the head in the toilet scene.
And what do you mean the X-Men isn't dark. Despite some candy coating, X-Men does play around with some heavy issues.
Yeah, it was one of the scenes in a car, because I read Rodriguez talking about how QT wanted to do it all analog but then it was gonna be all expensive so he caved on the digital and turned out to like it and now he's all "I'm gonna make a digital picture!"
If you think about it, that scene does have QT's smooth flow to it, with the macabre humor right until the violent end.
Dan Wrekenhaus 2 wrote:when I was into comics, my personality was a little less on the dark side, and more into Marvel, particularly x-men. Which scene specifically was Tarantino's?
Tarantino's scene was the head in the toilet scene.
And what do you mean the X-Men isn't dark. Despite some candy coating, X-Men does play around with some heavy issues.
well, I said my personality was less on the dark side... are we in agreement that Sin City is darker than X-Men? Especially during my days of comic reading, which would be circa 1993-1996-ish.
Even on the <a href="http://poemtastic.com">internet</a> I can't make friends.
As is my way, I just saw this yesterday. It was the last night it was showing at this second-run theatre in Littleton, NH, and a buddy of mine gave me an extra free pass he had kicking around.
I had a great time watching this movie. It has its shortcomings, I guess, some avoidable, others maybe less so; but it was a lot of fun and I'd watch it again.
Wow, there's usually that significant a delay in US films reaching your side of the pond? I find that surprising.
Oh, and in regards to (much) earlier comments, F4 doesn't seem too promising, but I DO remember enjoying The Thing's solo comic series quite a lot. I think they did 43 issues, and at one point I had nearly all of them.
This is a great movie and really well made, but c'mon with the likes of Rodriguez and Tarantino at the helm how can you lose. I really thought the Philip Marlow style narration was excellent in realizing the intent of the characters. Something that I think is difficult for actors as they have to act the narration while performing other tasks. Very cool.
My favourite was Rourke. I heard that he's a tad difficult on set, but man what a performance. Just awesome. Plain awesome. And the women were red hot. Smokin film. And to think that the whole shooting match was assumedly all done in studio. Even better. Highly reccommended. Stylized. Slick. And Uber Sexy!!!!
You mean Josh Hartnell. Elijah Wood is long dead by that point.
He's the assassin from the beginning of the film. He's been hired to take out the girl, revenge for her betraying the gang of prossies. It's tying up the loose ends.
i wasn't sure that he was an assassin. they didn't really make that clear. there was also some other stuff that i wasn't sure about, like how the story of the guy who was framed for killing the hooker tied into the story other than it shows the murder of roark and how messed up his family is. if that's what it was, they sure spent a lot of time proving that.