X-Maniac
Storm In A Teacup
- Joined
- Nov 26, 2003
- Messages
- 15,210
- Reaction score
- 631
- Points
- 103
The successful formula is simple.... Spiderman, Batman Begins, Xmen 1,2.... thats the formula... once you deviate from the source material... make an hour and a half action flick just to fill wallets... you sh:t on the fans... and X3 (NO IT WAS NOT IN THE LEAGUE OF Electra and the other WORST comic book films of all time) was the most disappointing... it really was... with that budget... with those expectations... it deviated... you stick to the source material like Singer did... and you can hash out some darn good pictures... now Superman Returns may have been a disappointment at the BO... but b/c WB is at least comitted... expect good things from the sequel
This is interesting, except... X-Men 1 did not use a comicbook storyline at all, Wolverine and Rogue do not join the team in that way in the source, and Cyclops/Jean/Storm are not the first X-Men, Jean's transformation into Phoenix is, in the source, much more than an odd stare at the Statue of Liberty. X2 also does not follow the comics - the Phoenix Saga does not happen like that in the comics, nor does the God Loves Man Kills storyline. I can't comment on how much Batman Begins resembles the source material, as I don't know the Batman comics well enough. As for Spider-Man... does GG have superstrength from a serum or an outfit intended to be a supersoldier uniform (and the most ridiculous supersoldier defence uniform ever)? And GG doesn't die in one storyline as in the movie.
These movies must have something else that you like, because they do NOT stick to the source material!
X3 also did have elements of the source material - the bridge sequence is inspired by the Planet X storyline in which Magneto uproots bridges in New York; Jean's mental blocks are part of the comics; Wolverine stabs, or attempts to stab, Jean in three comicbook stories, including the original Phoenix story; the scenes with mutant outcasts in the movie are derived from Morlocks and from District X (the comicbook mutant quarter).
What X3 did dare to do was to kill or cure key characters - this seems to be the main cause of dissatisfaction. In the comics, they discovered that deaths = sales, as the Phoenix death issue was a massive seller, as was the Age of Apocalypse issue whose cover hinted the X-Men were all dead. Obviously, in the comics this might work! In the movies, it's proved to be a source of anger, as the movies are much more limited than the number of comics.
I don't think following the source material has that much to do with it.


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