X-Maniac
Storm In A Teacup
- Joined
- Nov 26, 2003
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Box office is not a clear indicator of quality though, otherwise Epic Movie would be classic but it wasnt. Some on here pretend its an abomination but its poll rating, along with other readers awards it has won has shown it effected enough people for them to make the effort to vote for it, and as somone else said, 2 years after its release no doubt. If the movie was so poorly received, people wouldnt be voting for it in polls 2 years down the line. So you saying it clearly wasnt fabulous means nothing, especially when just as many people, if not more, people here, DID say it was fabulous, the majority of them have just moved on.
The fanbase on SR has been polarised since day one. That should tell you something. Of course, those who love the movie (or love Routh, in Mostpowerful's case

it has to represent the material correctly not go off on its own crazy tangent.
Iron Man also made more than every Batman movie other than TDK, so again, your point is moot.
I'm not sure this is true if adjusted for inflation. For instance, back in 1989 when the first Batman came out, ticket prices were almost half what they are now. Adjusting its box office for inflation gives a worldwide gross of $735million, which is more than Iron Man.
But Iron Man also did pretty well. It was a pop-culture movie but respectful to the source.
Neither Hellboy movie lacked anything any more than Iron Man did, which brought nothing new to the table at all, and the action scene's in both HB movies were leagues better than the one's in IM. In fact, I consider both HB movies to be better than IM by some way.
In terms of directorial visual craft, the second Hellboy film possibly is better than Iron Man. But, overall, both Hellboy films still lacked in the areas I specified - for instance had Hellboy 2 developed the environmental theme (creatures driven out from forests, mankind covering nature with car parks etc) it would have been stronger. Way-out fantasy films like that need to connect with an audience.
Saying it should equal success means nothing, there are countless movies in the past that have deserved to do far better or far worse financially than they did, IMO SR is one of them that deserved to do better
Indeed, some do far better or far worse... because it can be complex. I understand you believe SR deserved to do better, I believe it got what it deserved, that it's box office was a fair reflection of the film's appeal.
For me the likes of TDK and LOTR are more exceptions than the rule, its great that quality movies CAN do well, and the likes of TDK and LOTR deserve every bit of financial success they get IMO. But there are simply too many example of poor movies being very successful for me to take your claim seriously, FF, X3, AvP, Epic/Superhero/Whatever Movie, Big Momma's House, I could go on and on.
There are other factors affecting some of those - anticipation created by a pre-existing franchise (X3 and especially AvP), good marketing, the American market for slapstick/satire films, the children's market (I believe FF had an animated series running on TV... the DVD is even filed under kids films in my local supermarket!). And of course your definition of 'poor' isn't everyone's.
I didn't think Alien v Predator was that much of a huge success but what success it did have was more than likely based on the cool concept of the two creature races coming together to duke it out. I don't think we could expect much artistic depth.