No one is denying that man. Well, I'm not.
It's not as though this film has completely flopped yet anyway.
And the reason I wanted it to be successful is because it is basically a director sticking his middle finger up to the execs like Tom Rothman.
My apologies. I did not mean to make it seem as though I was responding to your post. My statement was merely sequential to yours. I was actually referring to posts generally made after my other previous post. So it was not directed at you sir.
As for Superman Returns...the movie was terrible. The acting was pretty much up to snuff. The action scenes (wait, there was action???) were done pretty well, but were far to scarce. Otherwise, Superman Returns was as much of a steaming pile as Batman and Robin. Batman & Robin is guilty of not taking itself seriously. Superman Returns took itself too seriously. They tried to make him this pitiful and sympathetic guy...it just doesn't work. I mean actually laughed when he got kryptonite shanked.
The whole movie was about how lonely he was without Krypton. How lonely he was without Lois. Then you had all of these supposed sad moments like discovering that he has a child and he wasn't there for him, or how he was beaten to a pulp and shanked by Luther and his henchman. That stuff was such a snooze fest. His most heroic display (at least in regards to the films intentions) was him lifting a giant rock into space. Then the hospital scene? Please...stop. I know Superman is supposed to save the day, but I think I needed someone to save me from Superman.
Now don't get me wrong. I own this film on DVD, just for the plane scene and the fact that I love comic movies, for better or for worse. But don't sit here and tell me that Superman Returns was decent or passable. If it was, then DC/Warner wouldn't be trying to a pull an Incredible Hulk and reboot this franchise. The fact remains that
1)DC has made some bad films and recovered from them...so that means that
2)This film not being a box office success won't mean that nobody will take a chance on obscure properties. In fact, Warner Bros (prior to The Dark Knight) was on a streak of success with their obscure properties, while their mainstream stuff was craptastic.
3)People can't make excuses about theme complexity, obscurity or any other excuse they wanna throw at this. The cold hard fact is, that this film was based on niche material, designed only to appeal to that niche audience, but utilized a blockbuster budget and hype engine. This is entirely Warner Bros' fault. Does it make Snyder some kind of martyr for being ardently faithful to the material rather than trying to compromise and appease all fans, like every other successful comic film franchise? That is a subjective view. But ultiamtely, this film will pay that price for trying to translate the comic rather than interpret it.
There is a reason Spider-Man didn't fight a secret war on an alien planet to get his symbiote. There is a reason why the X-Men traded in spandex tights for leather combat suits. Even The Dark Knight flipped off continuity by having The Joker create Two Face. But some how, it worked (especially given that two and a half hours was not enough time to cover two very deep antagonists in the Batman Rogues gallery).
I have said it before and I will say it again. There is a reason why this film is getting such poor reviews and a rapidly declining box office draw. Interpretation doesn't bastardize a piece of work. It often makes it function on screen. Some things naturally have to change in order for a film to be more believable or accessibl to more people. But if you all want to decry the usefulness of interpretation, because it will mar the legacy of your idolized "Watchmen source material" then at least stop complaining about the bad reviews and the expedient drop in revenue. They didn't make a film that works on screen, and this is the result. Plain and simple. And for those wondering about the current performance...still lackluster.
Thursday, March, 12, 2009
Watchmen
WARNER BROS.
Thtrs: 3611 / Gross: $2.60M
Total: $67.93M
http://showbizdata.com/