DACrowe
Avenger
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2000
- Messages
- 30,765
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P.P.S.
(sorry for making three posts
)
Bryan singer hardly played it safe. He was the risk taker. He was the one who put his neck on the line twice while fighting with Fox. He stressed character over action and depth over sfx. He had less to work with on both films and made more. And considering he made the first real superhero movie since Batman & Robin and the genre was considered box office posion shows someone unafraid to take risks.
Sure he didn't kill off any major characters (okay besides Stryker, Sabretooth, Toad and Senator Kellly) he crafted an excellent story that still didn't have its third act in which several character arcs were still building (Wolverine obviously, but also Rogue in the forefront and even Cyclops and of course Jean) that showed a passion to get these characters right. He made a movie that stressed diologue over explosions.
That is a huge risk for a summer blockbuster. Making a superhero movie nearly 2 1/2 hours in today's market ain't exactly playing it safe. Playing it safe is bowing down to whatever the studio wants the mto do, including killing off characters that the story obviously stressed shouldn't die. Writing off arcs taht were meant to carry the movies (Rogue was the beginning of the first X-Men movie and in some respects the end and her character arc was a cliffhanger in X2 and they jsut write her out essientially in X3), and to MAKE A 90 MINUTE GANG BANG BIG EXPLOSION MICHAEL BAY-ESQUE ACTION MOVIE IS THE DEFINTION OF PLAYING IT SAFE.
As for infidelities to the comics, Singer did take quite a few liberties but I would argue they worked outside of Storm and for every one Singer did Ratner/Fox took five for X3 alone, and to much more mediocre results too though.
(sorry for making three posts
Bryan singer hardly played it safe. He was the risk taker. He was the one who put his neck on the line twice while fighting with Fox. He stressed character over action and depth over sfx. He had less to work with on both films and made more. And considering he made the first real superhero movie since Batman & Robin and the genre was considered box office posion shows someone unafraid to take risks.
Sure he didn't kill off any major characters (okay besides Stryker, Sabretooth, Toad and Senator Kellly) he crafted an excellent story that still didn't have its third act in which several character arcs were still building (Wolverine obviously, but also Rogue in the forefront and even Cyclops and of course Jean) that showed a passion to get these characters right. He made a movie that stressed diologue over explosions.
That is a huge risk for a summer blockbuster. Making a superhero movie nearly 2 1/2 hours in today's market ain't exactly playing it safe. Playing it safe is bowing down to whatever the studio wants the mto do, including killing off characters that the story obviously stressed shouldn't die. Writing off arcs taht were meant to carry the movies (Rogue was the beginning of the first X-Men movie and in some respects the end and her character arc was a cliffhanger in X2 and they jsut write her out essientially in X3), and to MAKE A 90 MINUTE GANG BANG BIG EXPLOSION MICHAEL BAY-ESQUE ACTION MOVIE IS THE DEFINTION OF PLAYING IT SAFE.
As for infidelities to the comics, Singer did take quite a few liberties but I would argue they worked outside of Storm and for every one Singer did Ratner/Fox took five for X3 alone, and to much more mediocre results too though.
