TheAviator
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SuperMax was an awful idea. Make a real GA movie with Bradley Cooper or Cole Hauser and ditch SuperMax.
Green Arrow: Escape From the Supermax should be made, in my opinion. The Script was very good and, with some minor tweaks, mainly the addition of Black Canary and a stronger villain - either Deathstroke or a more capable Merlyn - it'd make for a great movie.
Here's the Plot summary, by the way.
In Star City, Queen Industries CEO Oliver Queen attends to a beneficent party where he meets his rival, Cross Enterprises CEO Marcus Cross, who wants to take over Queen Industries.
Meanwhile, halfway across the city, a mysterious individual breaks into the headquarters of the Checkmate World Security Agency and kills its leader, Colonel Taleb Beni Khalid. The police is tipped off about it and Queen hears about it, leaving the party and adopting the identity the masked crimefighter Green Arrow to investigate.
Upon arriving, he discovers that the assassin used arrows identical to his, framing him for Khalid's murder. Green Arrow is then captured by the police and his secret identity is revealed to the public. He is found guilty of murder and sentenced to life imprisionment at the Supermax Penitentiary for Meta-Human Criminals created by Checkmate, where he is antagonized and tortured by the warden, Amanda Waller.
Queen befriends another inmate, Hartley Rathaway, also know as "Pied Piper", who explains him the rules of the Supermax: Each prisioner has a microchip - the Parallax Device - attached to their arm, which prevents them from using their powers; and each night the location of the cells changes in order to prevent break-outs. They decide to escape together.
Meanwhile, Cross and Queen's best friend, Will Hackett, who betrayed him in order to steal his fortune, discover that Queen needs to be declared dead in order for Cross to buy his company, so they hire the same man that murdered Khalid, the hitman Merlyn, to infiltrate the Supermax and eliminate Queen.
At Supermax, Queen tells Rathway that, five years prior, he fell from his yatch during a tropical storm after embarrasing himself in a party and was stranded on an island for three months, relying only on his skills as an archer to survive before drug dealers who used the island to storage their products arrived on a speedboat which Queen was able to steal after ambushing and arresting them. Unbeknowst to Queen, however, it was Hackett who pushed him off the yatch in a fit of anger and jealousy.
After this, Queen and Rathaway enlist four other inmates to their escape: the shapeshifting Gemini, the teleporter Split, the elemental Cascade and the termomanipulator Icicle. With their help, Queen and Rathaway create a tunnel that'll lead them to freedom. They then have another prisioner, the Tattooed Man, produce a Flash Drive, and storage another prisioner, the living computer virus Djinn, inside. Queen manages to put Djinn inside Supermax's grid, and he disables the Parallax devices, allowing them to escape.
During the escape, Merlyn attacks Queen with a makeshift bow and arrows, but is defeated and captured by Checkmate. A violent inmate, Blockbuster, kills Split during the ensuing riot and takes his place in the escape. However, the group is throw back when they discover that the Supermax is not in the Pacific Ocean as they believed, but in Antarctica. Cascade is killed in the escape, and Waller sends Checkmate after the group.
Checkmate lures the group into a trap, imprisioning them at a Checkmate research center, but they are able to escape. Rathaway is killed in the process, and Blockbuster betrays the others, trying to escape alone. Queen, Gemini and Icicle escape on a Checkmate vehicle just as Waller explodes the facility, killing Blockbuster.
The trio returns to Star City, where Icicle leaves them. Queen and Gemini meet with Hackett, still believing him to be reliable, but he betrays them, and police starts a manhunt on them. Queen retrieves his equipment from a safe house and attacks Hackett at Queen Industries alongside Gemini. Meanwhile, Waller discovers that Merlyn was working for Cross and corners Green Arrow and Gemini in Star City. After a violent confrontation with Hackett, a defeated Queen gives up and is imprisioned again.
Gemini escapes during the fight and recovers evidence of Cross' plan, which she leaks to the press. She then helps Queen trick Hackett into confessing his participation in the conspiracy, and he is arrested by the FBI. Queen is cleared of all charges. Cross commits suicide to escape prison. Queen denounces Waller's inhuman way to treat the Supermax inmates, and she is arrested as well.
Gemini is forced to stay at the newly-reformed Supermax, but Queen manages to reduce her sentence due to her assistance in taking down Waller, Cross and Hackett. He also adopts her 9-year-old daughter Rouge and promises Gemini that she'll have a home at Queen Manor when she's out. He then returns to Star City to continue protecting it as the Green Arrow.
The whole Supermax script thing: ....ugh.
Storywise, it's no better than Prison Break or any number of cheap jailhouse actioners featuring Van Damme or Stallone; and in terms of subject matter, turns out to be nothing more than an episodic meander through a rogues' gallery of GA (and non-GA) villains. That movie would have had zero appeal outside of GA/DC fandom, and would likely have been a direct-to-DVDer.
^ A prison movie with superheroes would be very interesting to the General Audience. It is something they've never seen before.
I hope if they do a Green Arrow movie down the line, his costume is similar to this:
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SuperMax was an awful idea. Make a real GA movie with Bradley Cooper or Cole Hauser and ditch SuperMax.
Supermax can be done and still introduce the character and his pathos.
The hood is ok, but atleast in the first film, the hat should be used mainly.
Charlie Hunnam over Bradley Cooper any day, I say.
John McTiernan, Jan de Bont, Ivan Reitman, Jonathan Demme.... taste this suggestions. They surely must appeal to you more than my dream picks Darren Aronofsky and Terry Gilliam, who nobody gives a s**t about.
Godzilla2014: GA is silly looking and it could be better having his without his costume while posses all his other strong sides such as being smart and a good fighter. GA is a kind of strange superhero and maybe deserves a strange film.
Godzilla2014: What I meant by strange film, is that Supermax would be totally different from the others in the genre. All films share the same "saving the world" kind of thing, while Supermax will be about something completely else.
And he would still be the regurlar Green Arrow at the beginning and the end.
I am saying this because I can understand the prison story a little. But personally, I would prefer a ordinary film too.
Hat vs hood? For me, the hat is Green Arrow. Dorky, yes. But they have to make it work. A challange for the film.
Godzilla2014: I like the idea of a Green Arrow film because he's a interesting hero. But I can admit that the clothes he wears, Robin Hood clone, looks weird on a modern day superhero. A little silly in fact. I am not completely blinded of admiration for the guy, I can also see the other things about him as well. Bow and arrows are stupid weapons in today's world, just as Hawkman's mace. But it's part of the heroes' charm.
Just as being said, Oliver Queen needs a good backstory, and the Green Arrow persona with suit and gadgets a lot of explanation.
They also have to make him stand on his own, to have a distinct approach not close to anything similar, so that he doesn't come across as a DC Comic's Hawkeye.
GA should be treated as the main hero he is, able to carry a story of his own, that Marvel guy should be more like a "filler" in comparison.
This is what Warner has to do to make GA work as a film. Or else they can just thrash everything and cancel this hero for good.
I have to agree with Godzilla 2014, as far as the whole "first movie needs to be in his element" thing goes. Sure it would be nice to see something different, like the prison idea and whatnot, where he's out of costume and things like that, but they can do that with some other hero, if they really want a story like that. Heroes like Batman and Superman and even Wonder Woman are popular enough and out in the eye of the public often enough that everyone knows who they are, who their villains are, what they are supposed to look like and act like, what city they come from, and what their motivation is for doing what they do. Green Arrow is much less known. Lots of people probably wouldn't even know what you were talking about, if you asked them about the character. So if a movie was to finally be done with him as the focus (Which I would TOTALLY be excited to see!!!) it would have to be him just doing his thing. And since recently the popular thing has been origin stories, I'm sure that would be the main plot line, kind of like Batman Begins. You might say "Oh, well that's been done to death and it's not original and no one wants to see that AGAIN" but that IS actually what people want, or the studios wouldn't continue making new superhero origin movies like Thor and Captain America and Green Lantern, etc, etc, etc. Those movies are making money and that's what the studio is looking at.
So yeah. Point being, I think a GA movie would be AMAZING, but he would have to be in his costume, in Star City, doing what he does best. You can't mess with a character few people know very well, otherwise EVERYONE will think of the character that is portrayed in the first movie and if that isn't an acurate portrayal of how he's supposed to be, well what's the point?
So should a GA movie (ignoring the SuperMax awfulness for a while) be done like Daredevil was, with him on a mission as GA at the start, and his origin be told in flashbacks leading up to the moment the movie starts; or like Batman Begins with the origin leading up to his shipwreck being told in a flashback and ending with his waking up on the island before the rest plays out and he becomes GA; or origin from start to finish with us not seeing him as GA until he actually becomes GA over halfway through the film?
Personally, I don't mind if it was an origin story or not, so long as that origin story doesn't feel perfunctory and done only for the sake of telling the origin story.
Exactly! Haha I like these origin movies as much as the next guy, they're just getting repetetive and, like you said, they are starting to feel like they're only being done for the sake of doing an origin story. xD
Well yeah, the whole movie industry is in a certain point in history right now. We'll look back on the last decade or so as the remake boom where every old movie with an even slightly interesting concept was reworked and the next 5-10-ish years will be the comic boom. And since the origin story concept worked so well for Batman Begins and those other earlier comic movies, that's what everyone started making. Plus a lot of these characters are really popular and well known, but have never actually had a movie done about them so everyone figures it's only natural for the first movie of a hero should be him/her getting to be where they eventually end up.
I think origin stories just work better for the format of feature films. It's a clearly defined dramatic arc that practically writes itself.I think the reason there are so many origin movies these days is that people want to see the beginning of things. We don't want to start at the 37th encounter between Batman and the Joker, we want to see their first encounter.
Outside the fanbase, people just want good explanations.
It's a clearly defined dramatic arc that practically writes itself.