The Russos, Alan Taylor, James Gunn and even Edgar Wright were certainly not on my short list for directors for the Phase II films. I still question some of those decisions, but I know that you could just as well say (as many did) that Jon Favreau did *not* have the right resume to direct Iron Man.
So....benefit of the doubt and all that. If the Russos screw up the Cap movie, I'll fanboyrage then.
Good call. A lot of the time when we've had a director who didn't seem to be right for directing a big budget superhero movie, they not only succeeded, but hit it out of the park. I mean, let's do a quick rundown: Sam Raimi directing
Spider-Man? Chris Nolan doing Batman? Jon Favreau on
Iron Man? Mark Webb, again, with Spider-Man? I could go on...in each case, there was nothing on the director's resume prior to filming that indicated they could handle a blockbuster superhero flick. But in each case, that actually turned out to be a benefit. By hiring directors not known for this kind of film, the studios managed to create truly unique movies that had a special charm, rather than generic blockbusters. Favreau injected a quirky humour into
Iron Man, Nolan grounded the Dark Knight in gritty realism, Webb nailed the teen angst and offbeat romance.
Compare that to the times when we've had seasoned directors take the reins of superhero films. Interestingly enough, these supposed "safe hands" often end up creating something more generic than anything else. Just look at Bryan Singer's take on Superman. Fans at the time were fairly enthusiastic; the guy directed two
X-Men pictures, so how could he fail at re-inventing the last son of Krypton? But as it turned out, his "vision" for Superman was notoriously flawed. The same could be said for Martin Campbell on
Green Lantern: proven action director, everything seemed to be in place - but in the end,
Green Lantern was one of the most generic superhero movies ever made, totally failed to live up to the promise of its concept and was a box office bomb.
So it seems that the strategy of hiring unlikely but talented directors with their own style and vision has created better films than the so-called "safe" choices. That makes me wonder what will happen with
Man of Steel. Superman is my absolute favourite superhero, and after the debacle of SR, I'm desperate to see him re-take the mantle of the definitive cinematic superhero. Having directed
Watchmen, Snyder on the surface seems like a safe choice, the trailer was intriguing, and with a script by David Goyer you'd think everything is set to create movie magic. But as we've seen in the past, the apparent "safe" choice often results in nothing but mediocrity.