It's been proven numerous times that adaptions which are faithful can be successful. Of course, it varies in the specific franchise being adapted. The more its treated like that by Hollywood the better. Some are easier then others to adapt, but that doesn't mean they can't still be successes or have great quality. Some are easier to adapt then others, but that doesn't mean they can't still be successes or have great quality. When Hollywood makes crap that doesn't sell, just like comics, tv shows or video-games, it has only itself to blame for not making money.
Just like any other movie the people who make it need to make a good product. They actually end up with that money that way.
I agree, except I wish that your last statement was 100% true. The good products don't always make the good money, and that's for any type of movie.
No its fact. Its how film making is taught. Obviously people color outside the line, but essentially thats exactly what movies are.
No, it's not fact.
But the point is everyone wonders where everything comes from. People keep asking why does Green arrow have his political stance? Who cares, he just has to show it in his actions a strong political stance. Theres so much origin BS that can just be skipped.
And when i say show not tell, i dont mean show the origin, i mean show the movie and reveal the necessary information over the course of the movie, not just tell the personal history of a character from start to finish. Perfect example:Last Boyscout
It's obvious by this post and the other posts you made in this thread that you are anti-origin. I'll just do us a favor, and end our discussion because we're only going to disagree more. Whatever floats your boat.
The death of art basically, sure.
Believe me I am just as much a realist as you are.
Sadly, yep.
I disagree with you saying that it shouldn’t. Because it can and it does. I’m saying this not as a comic book reader but as an intellectual, who likes to be educated and intellectually challenged by the entertainment of my choice.
Now it could be argued that the superhero genre isn’t the type of movie where that kind of challenge could be applied but no wonder the Japanese prevail in their anime and manga - they don’t treat cartoons and comic books as exclusively an adolescent medium.
You're right.
In America, when people think comic books, they think of two things. They think of adolescents and the stereotypical "geek." I am just saying that people aren't going to go see
Iron Man or whatever superhero movie, watch it without a clue of an origin or backstory, and seriously want to flock to the comic book shops or do research on the net to figure it out. Now for a select minority, yeah, it happens and that is how new comic book fans are born, but for the vast majority, it doesn't work that way.
True enough. I never said origin stories are useless and worthless. I’m proposing that it is not the only way to approach superheroes and that the origin-less franchises should be practiced a bit more often.
I agree with you there, too. Blade, Hellboy, (etc.) did it, and in a way, it added so much more to the characters. The origin story can always work, but it's never necessary.
Sometimes, it adds more to not have the origin story than it would to have it.
Jules: “That’s an interesting point.”
Thing is we’re not talking about their adapted counterparts; we’re talking about their movies.
So what you are saying is that, if a character has a linear origin from the get go, he is doomed to have only that specific approach and no big creative endeavour would be necessary.
Nope, all I am saying is that people can't really say how origins in superhero movies are unnecessary, then compare Robin Hood to Spider-Man. They are completely different types of characters. Robin Hood wasn't like a comic book character with an origin, and all of that. He was created with a purpose, and bam. Of course, he would not need an origin story because he never had one to begin with. The only way he'd have one is if he had a movie, and the writer decided to add an origin story to support the character and show more of a "motivation" for his actions. I'm not saying a Spider-Man movie with no full-on origin would be a bad movie, or wouldn't work.
All Sam Raimi did with SMI is copy and paste some comic book pages. It worked for Spider-Man, it definitely worked for Sin City but that shouldn’t be the only way of doing things. That would be creative bankruptcy.
You're right. Iron Man's origin in the movie was like a cut-in-paste job, but my main point is that the origin was necessary as it added more to the character of Tony Stark. It helped him become more of a likable character, and for being a character that barely anyone outside of the comic book geeks know, not having an origin would have been a bad move. His origin is key to everything plot related in the movie.
You’re only saying that because you can’t imagine any other better alternative.
Both Iron Man and Batman worked fine for what they were.
Yes, they did. My Iron Man reason is in the above post, but I feel that they did what they did in
Batman Begins because we had never seen Batman's origin that fleshed out in any of the movies or cartoons. In Batman's case, it was unique and original because he hadn't had it with Tim Burton. It gave, at least, one version of Batman a true, solid origin.
That’s the problem with business that sets on making money from art - it sticks with what works first and rarely diverges. You can’t speak for everyone. Don’t underestimate the average movie goer. And there are many different ways to look at a potential story.
Yep, there are many different ways to look at a potential story. But hey, I'm just fine with whatever works. Origin or origin-less stories are out of my control. I can only judge on whether it on whether it was good or not.