Cypocalypse
Civilian
- Joined
- May 29, 2006
- Messages
- 43
- Reaction score
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- Points
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I watch Ghost Rider on Valentine's day and that's probably one of the first Marvel movies I've watched with absolutely no initial expectations prior to watching it. It's like I couldn't place GR anywhere in the scheme of things. Should I treat it as a Marvel Max type of movie, should I treat it as a Marvel Knights movie or should I treat it as any of those mega goofy Marvel comic books of the 60s up to the 70s? GR has always been a B-rated character anyway, so I don't know how I should view him. He just comes out every now and then. The last comic book series in which he came out was done so beautifully (in a digital art kind of way), that it made me think that Marvel is targeting this book for the fans of Udon, although I think that since we're dealing with demons here, I think Marvel should have "Vertigo-ed" the series or something.
So I decided to leave my smart@ss mode for a moment prior to watching the movie. It thought that it would be a waste of time to initially categorize this movie. I'll just leave my brain for 2 hours, and see if I'll be entertained with this movie.
Well, as it turned out, I actually enjoyed this movie. Leaving all my preemptive ideas behind was a good decision. I got entertained. No smart@ss side of me got disappointed. The effects were cool, the dialogue was funny, and Ghost Rider was bad@ss. It's like I was possessed by the child in me for that 2 hours.
Well, I thought the director probably doesn't know what to do with this movie, but later he thought, "Well, I might as well have fun doing this if I'm not so sure of what I'll do with this." Hence, the result was a GR movie which was more goofy than what most of us expected. Basically a movie waiting to be axed by "intellectual" critics. But the bottom line is, I got entertained.
I thought that maybe most comic book movies suffer the same problem. That is, the director doesn't know what to do with it and the diverse comic book fans (with their different levels of maturity) don't know how they should be seeing it, or at least have a consensus on the basic principles on how the film should be seen.
You turn a known goofy character (from his creation up to the present time) into a modernized version of him just for the heck of being contemporary and being cool, you get Ang Lee's Hulk. Now they realized that Hulk needs to remain old school to work, so now, they're making The Incredible Hulk.
You turn a comic book character that honestly needs a contemporary sensibility for it to work, and you get Batman Begins - which indeed turned out to be a good film.
You leave an iconic character for what it is and just make a faithful adaptation from its comic book incarnation, and you get Spider-Man. Again, this worked.
You expect a film to be noir, probably like Frank Miller's run on Batman (e.g., DKR), but then you see a showcase of pop bands like Evanescence, you get Daredevil.
You watch a movie that you don't know whether it'll be very faithful to Cristopher Reeves stint or whether it'll be a new approach on the character, you get Superman Returns. Heck, I bet Brian Singer had this dilemma too.
You turn a geeky comic book series into something that can be understood by the masses (e.g., no space travel, cloning, and all of that stuff), you get X-Men 1 and X-men 2. You try to be pseudo intellectual and add more "depth" to the movie by putting emphasis on issues like human prejudice, but at the expense of losing the faithfulness to the comic books, you get X-Men 3.
Based on what I've listed, only Batman Begins and Spider-Man worked. That's because, we have a consensus on how we should see the film and the directors know about it.
Other comic book titles don't have that privilege.
In your case, though, do you have pre-conceived ideas on how you'll see a comic book movie that's about to come out?
So I decided to leave my smart@ss mode for a moment prior to watching the movie. It thought that it would be a waste of time to initially categorize this movie. I'll just leave my brain for 2 hours, and see if I'll be entertained with this movie.
Well, as it turned out, I actually enjoyed this movie. Leaving all my preemptive ideas behind was a good decision. I got entertained. No smart@ss side of me got disappointed. The effects were cool, the dialogue was funny, and Ghost Rider was bad@ss. It's like I was possessed by the child in me for that 2 hours.
Well, I thought the director probably doesn't know what to do with this movie, but later he thought, "Well, I might as well have fun doing this if I'm not so sure of what I'll do with this." Hence, the result was a GR movie which was more goofy than what most of us expected. Basically a movie waiting to be axed by "intellectual" critics. But the bottom line is, I got entertained.
I thought that maybe most comic book movies suffer the same problem. That is, the director doesn't know what to do with it and the diverse comic book fans (with their different levels of maturity) don't know how they should be seeing it, or at least have a consensus on the basic principles on how the film should be seen.
You turn a known goofy character (from his creation up to the present time) into a modernized version of him just for the heck of being contemporary and being cool, you get Ang Lee's Hulk. Now they realized that Hulk needs to remain old school to work, so now, they're making The Incredible Hulk.
You turn a comic book character that honestly needs a contemporary sensibility for it to work, and you get Batman Begins - which indeed turned out to be a good film.
You leave an iconic character for what it is and just make a faithful adaptation from its comic book incarnation, and you get Spider-Man. Again, this worked.
You expect a film to be noir, probably like Frank Miller's run on Batman (e.g., DKR), but then you see a showcase of pop bands like Evanescence, you get Daredevil.
You watch a movie that you don't know whether it'll be very faithful to Cristopher Reeves stint or whether it'll be a new approach on the character, you get Superman Returns. Heck, I bet Brian Singer had this dilemma too.
You turn a geeky comic book series into something that can be understood by the masses (e.g., no space travel, cloning, and all of that stuff), you get X-Men 1 and X-men 2. You try to be pseudo intellectual and add more "depth" to the movie by putting emphasis on issues like human prejudice, but at the expense of losing the faithfulness to the comic books, you get X-Men 3.
Based on what I've listed, only Batman Begins and Spider-Man worked. That's because, we have a consensus on how we should see the film and the directors know about it.
Other comic book titles don't have that privilege.
In your case, though, do you have pre-conceived ideas on how you'll see a comic book movie that's about to come out?